Mapping of Texture and Phase Fractions in Heterogeneous Stress States during Multiaxial Loading of Biomedical Superelastic NiTi

Douglas E. Nicholson, Santo A. Padula, Othmane Benafan, Jeffrey R. Bunn, E. Andrew Payzant, Ke An, Dayakar Penumadu, Raj Vaidyanathan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Thermoelastic deformation mechanisms in polycrystalline biomedical-grade superelastic NiTi are spatially mapped using in situ neutron diffraction during multiaxial loading and heating. The trigonal R-phase is formed from the cubic phase during cooling to room temperature and subsequently deforms in compression, tension, and torsion. The resulting R-phase variant microstructure from the variant reorientation and detwinning processes are equivalent for the corresponding strain in tension and compression, and the variant microstructure is reversible by isothermal loading. The R-phase variant microstructure is consistent between uniaxial and torsional loading when the principal stress directions of the stress state are considered (for the crystallographic directions observed here). The variant microstructure evolution is tracked and the similarity in general behavior between uniaxial and torsional loading, in spite of the implicit heterogeneous stress state associated with torsional loading, pointed to the ability of the reversible thermoelastic transformation in NiTi to accommodate stress and strain mismatch with deformation. This ability of the R-phase, despite its limited variants, to accommodate stress and strain and satisfy strain incompatibility in addition to the existing internal stresses has significance for reducing irrecoverable deformation mechanisms during loading and cycling through the phase transformation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2005092
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume33
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 4 2021

Funding

The authors acknowledge funding from the NASA Fundamental Aeronautics Program Subsonic Fixed Wing Project (Grant No. NNX11AI57A) and the Aeronautical Sciences Project. The authors thank P. Cornwell and H. D. Skorpenske at ORNL for technical support. The authors also thank R. Woracek and S. B. Puplampu at UTK for implementing the use of a portable axial/torsion load frame at NRSF2. This research used resources at the High Flux Isotope Reactor and the Spallation Neutron Source, DOE Office of Science User Facilities operated by the ORNL. The authors acknowledge funding from the NASA Fundamental Aeronautics Program Subsonic Fixed Wing Project (Grant No.?NNX11AI57A) and the Aeronautical Sciences Project. The authors thank P. Cornwell and H. D. Skorpenske at ORNL for technical support. The authors also thank R. Woracek and S. B. Puplampu at UTK for implementing the use of a portable axial/torsion load frame at NRSF2. This research used resources at the High Flux Isotope Reactor and the Spallation Neutron Source, DOE Office of Science User Facilities operated by the ORNL.

Keywords

  • NiTi
  • R-phase
  • multiaxial stress
  • shape-memory alloys
  • torsion

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