Large recovery strain in Fe-Mn-Si-based shape memory steels obtained by engineering annealing twin boundaries

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Abstract

Shape memory alloys are a unique class of materials that can recover their original shape upon heating after a large deformation. Ti-Ni alloys with a large recovery strain are expensive, while low-cost conventional processed Fe-Mn-Si-based steels suffer from a low recovery strain (<3%). Here we show that the low recovery strain results from interactions between stress-induced martensite and a high density of annealing twin boundaries. Reducing the density of twin boundaries is thus a critical factor for obtaining a large recovery strain in these steels. By significantly suppressing the formation of twin boundaries, we attain a tensile recovery strain of 7.6% in an annealed cast polycrystalline Fe-20.2Mn-5.6Si-8.9Cr-5.0Ni steel (weight%). Further attractiveness of this material lies in its low-cost alloying components and simple synthesis-processing cycle consisting only of casting plus annealing. This enables these steels to be used at a large scale as structural materials with advanced functional properties

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Wen, Y. H., Peng, H. B., Raabe, D., Gutierrez-Urrutia, I., Chen, J., & Du, Y. Y. (2014). Large recovery strain in Fe-Mn-Si-based shape memory steels obtained by engineering annealing twin boundaries. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5964

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