info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Effect of Variable Amplitude Blocks’ Ordering on the Functional Fatigue of Superelastic NiTi Wires
Fecha
2017-11-03Registro en:
Soul, Hugo Ramon; Yawny, Alejandro Andres; Effect of Variable Amplitude Blocks’ Ordering on the Functional Fatigue of Superelastic NiTi Wires; Springer; Shape Memory and Superelasticity; 3; 4; 3-11-2017; 431-442
2199-384X
2199-3858
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Soul, Hugo Ramon
Yawny, Alejandro Andres
Resumen
Accumulation of superelastic cycles in NiTi uniaxial element generates changes on the stress–strain response. Basically, there is an uneven drop of martensitic transformation stress plateaus and an increase of residual strain. This evolution associated with deterioration of superelastic characteristics is referred to as “functional fatigue” and occurs due to irreversible microstructural changes taking place each time a material domain transforms. Unlike complete cycles, for which straining is continued up to elastic loading of martensite, partial cycles result in a differentiated evolution of those material portions affected by the transformation. It is then expected that the global stress–strain response would reflect the previous cycling history of the specimen. In the present work, the consequences of cycling of NiTi wires using blocks of different strain amplitudes interspersed in different sequences are analyzed. The effect of successive increasing, successive decreasing, and interleaved strain amplitudes on the evolution of the superelastic response is characterized. The feasibility of postulating a functional fatigue criterion similar to the Miner’s cumulative damage law used in structural fatigue analysis is discussed. The relation of the observed stress–strain response with the transformational history of the specimen can be rationalized by considering that the stress-induced transformation proceeds via localized propagating fronts.