Experimentally Validated Constitutive Model for NiTi-based Shape Memory Alloys Featuring Intermediate R-phase Transformation: A Case Study of Ni 48 Ti 49 Fe 3

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Frost ◽  
Alan Jurysta ◽  
L. Heller ◽  
P. Sedlák
Author(s):  
Francis R. Phillips ◽  
Daniel Martin ◽  
Dimitris C. Lagoudas ◽  
Robert W. Wheeler

Shape memory alloys (SMAs) are unique materials capable of undergoing a thermo-mechanically induced, reversible, crystallographic phase transformation. As SMAs are utilized across a variety of applications, it is necessary to understand the internal changes that occur throughout the lifetime of SMA components. One of the key limitations to the lifetime of a SMA component is the response of SMAs to fatigue. SMAs are subject to two kinds of fatigue, namely structural fatigue due to cyclic mechanical loading which is similar to high cycle fatigue, and functional fatigue due to cyclic phase transformation which typical is limited to the low cycle fatigue regime. In cases where functional fatigue is due to thermally induced phase transformation in contrast to being mechanically induced, this form of fatigue can be further defined as actuation fatigue. Utilizing X-ray computed microtomography, it is shown that during actuation fatigue, internal damage such as cracks or voids, evolves in a non-linear manner. A function is generated to capture this non-linear internal damage evolution and introduced into a SMA constitutive model. Finally, it is shown how the modified SMA constitutive model responds and the ability of the model to predict actuation fatigue lifetime is demonstrated.


2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 (0) ◽  
pp. _OS1001-1_-_OS1001-2_ ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiko Suzuki ◽  
Wakako Araki ◽  
Hideo Shibutani ◽  
Takaei Yamamoto ◽  
Toshio Sakuma

2012 ◽  
Vol 32-33 ◽  
pp. 155-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitris Lagoudas ◽  
Darren Hartl ◽  
Yves Chemisky ◽  
Luciano Machado ◽  
Peter Popov

2008 ◽  
Vol 56 ◽  
pp. 84-91
Author(s):  
Tadashige Ikeda

A simple yet accurate macroscopic constitutive model of shape memory alloys has been developed. The features of this model are (1) energy-based phase transformation criterion, (2) one-dimensional phase transformation rule based on a micromechanical viewpoint, (3) dissipated energy with a form of a sum of two exponential functions, (4) duplication of the strain rate effect, and (5) adaptability to multi-phase transformation. This model is further improved to be able to express stress-strain relationships such that the reverse transformation starts at a higher stress than the martensitic transformation starts. Here, the ideal reversible transformation temperature is empirically described by a function of the martensite volume fraction. In this paper, an outline of our model is given, where the improvement is introduced. Then, it is shown that the model can quantitatively duplicate the major and minor hysteresis loops, strain rate effect, and asymmetry in tension and compression on the stress-strain relationship. And that it can also duplicate the stress-strain relationships having the reverse transformation start stress higher than the forward one.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-37
Author(s):  
Mengqian Zhang ◽  
Theocharis Baxevanis

Abstract A 3D finite-strain constitutive model for shape memory alloys (SMAs) is proposed. The model can efficiently describe reversible phase transformation from austenite to self-accommodated and/or oriented martensite, (re)orientation of martensite variants, minor loops, latent heat effects, and tension–compression asymmetry based on the Eulerian logarithmic strain and the corotational logarithmic objective rate. It further accounts for transformation volume contraction, smooth thermomechanical response, temperature dependence of the critical force required for (re)orientation, temperature and load dependence of the hysteresis width, asymmetry between forward and reverse phase transformation, and is flexible enough to address the deformation response in the concurrent presence of several phases, i.e., when austenite, self-accommodated and oriented martensite co-exist in the microstructure. The ability of the proposed model to describe the aforementioned deformation response characteristics of SMAs under multiaxial, thermomechanical, nonproportional loading relies on the set of three independent internal variables, i.e., the average volume fraction of martensite variants, their preferred direction, and the magnitude of the induced inelastic strain, that further allow for an implicit description of a fourth internal variable, the volume fraction of oriented as opposed to self-accommodated martensite. The calibration of the model and its numerical implementation in an efficient scheme are presented. The model is validated against experimental results associated with complex thermomechanical paths, including tension/compression/torsion experiments and the efficiency of its numerical implementation is verified with simulations of the response of a biomedical superelastic SMA stent and an SMA spring actuator.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document