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Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. Vol. 1782 © 2015 Materials Research Society
DOI: 10.1557/opl.2015.
Molecular dynamics simulations of
the two-way shape-memory effect in NiTi nanowires
Prashanth Srinivasan
1
, Lucia Nicola
2
, Barend Thijsse
2
, Angelo Simone
1
1
Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology
Delft, The Netherlands
2
Faculty of Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering, Delft University of Technology
Delft, The Netherlands
ABSTRACT
Shape memory alloys (SMAs) exist in different phases depending on temperature and stress
level. Experimental evidence shows that SMAs oscillate between two shapes during thermal
cycling. This phenomenon, known as two-way shape-memory effect, occurs due to a
transformation between the austenitic phase and the martensitic phase. The two-way
shape-memory behavior is studied here by molecular dynamics simulations in NiTi nanowires of
different diameter to understand the effect of loading on the size-dependent behavior. Thermal
cycling is performed while holding the system at zero stress and at a fixed compressive stress. At
zero stress, the martensite structure formed on cooling depends on the wire diameter. However,
when cooling is performed at a sufficiently large constant compressive stress, the formation of a
single martensitic variant is observed for all diameters.
INTRODUCTION
Shape memory alloys are unique materials which are increasingly being used in various
applications at the micro- and nano-scale [1]. Temperature-dependent response imparts special
properties to these alloys. The two-way shape-memory effect (TWSME) is the ability of the SMA
to remember two shapes at two different temperatures. This arises due to a transformation
between the high temperature austenitic phase and a low temperature martensitic phase. Upon
cooling, bulk austenite forms a multi-variant martensitic structure if not stressed, whereas it forms
a single variant martensite under tension or compression [2, 3]. Jones and Dye [4] studied
experimentally the microstructural evolution of the martensitic phase in
1.5 mm × 1.5 mm × 19 mm NiTi specimens when they were thermally cycled under an applied
load. They concluded that a particular martensitic variant grows along the load axis upon cooling
to accommodate the applied strain, thereby leading to the TWSME.
The austenitic phase of NiTi has a cubic B2-type crystal structure. Upon cooling bulk NiTi at
zero stress below a particular transformation temperature, the B2 structure transforms into a B19’
type monoclinic martensitic twinned structure. However, in nano-systems, it was reported that the
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