Two prevalent myths of Nitinol mechanics are examined: (1) Martensite is more compliant than austenite; (2) Texture-free Nitinol polycrystals do not exhibit tension–compression asymmetry. By reviewing existing literature, the following truths are revealed: (1) Martensite crystals may be more compliant, equally stiff, or stiffer than austenite crystals, depending on the orientation of the applied load. The Young’s Modulus of polycrystalline Nitinol is not a fixed number—it changes with both processing and in operando deformations. Nitinol martensite prefers to behave stiffer under compressive loads and more compliant under tensile loads. (2) Inelastic Nitinol martensite deformation in and of itself is asymmetric, even for texture-free polycrystals. Texture-free Nitinol polycrystals also exhibit tension–compression transformation asymmetry.
CITATION STYLE
Bucsek, A. N., Paranjape, H. M., & Stebner, A. P. (2016). Myths and Truths of Nitinol Mechanics: Elasticity and Tension–Compression Asymmetry. Shape Memory and Superelasticity, 2(3), 264–271. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40830-016-0074-z
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