J. Mater. Sci. Technol. ›› 2023, Vol. 146: 154-167.DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2022.11.007

• Research Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Improved stability of superelasticity and elastocaloric effect in Ti-Ni alloys by suppressing Lüders-like deformation under tensile load

Pengfei Danga, Jianbo Panga, Yumei Zhoua,*, Lei Dinga, Lei Zhanga, Xiangdong Dinga,*, Turab Lookmanb,*, Jun Suna, Dezhen Xuea,*   

  1. aState Key Laboratory for Mechanical Behavior of Materials, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China;
    bAiMaterials Research LLC, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA
  • Received:2022-09-15 Revised:2022-11-27 Accepted:2022-11-30 Published:2023-05-20 Online:2023-05-15
  • Contact: * E-mail addresses: zhouyumei@xjtu.edu.cn (Y. Zhou), dingxd@mail.xjtu.edu.cn (X. Ding), turablookman@gmail.com (T. Lookman), xuedezhen@xjtu.edu.cn (D. Xue)

Abstract: Functional stability of superelasticity is crucial for practical applications of shape memory alloys. It is degraded by a Lüders-like deformation with elevated local stress concentration under tensile load. By increasing the degree of solute supersaturation and applying appropriate thermomechanical treatments, a Ti-Ni alloy with nanocrystallinity and dispersed nanoprecipitates is obtained. In contrast to conventional Ti-Ni alloys, the superelasticity in the target alloy is accompanied by homogeneous deformation due to the sluggish stress-induced martensitic transformation. The alloy thus shows a fully recoverable strain of 6% under tensile stress over 1 GPa and a large adiabatic temperature decrease of 13.1 K under tensile strain of 4.5% at room temperature. Moreover, both superelasticity and elastocaloric effect exhibit negligible degradation in response to applied strain of 4% during cycling. We attribute the improved functional stability to low dislocation activity resulting from the suppression of localized deformation and the combined strengthening effect of nanocrystalline structure and nanoprecipitates. Thus, the design of such a microstructure enabling homogeneous deformation provides a recipe for stable superelasticity and elastocaloric effect.

Key words: Ti-Ni alloys, Superelasticity, Elastocaloric effect, Martensite band, Functional stability