X-ray measurements of the self-organization of martensitic variants during thermal cycling
ORAL
Abstract
The deformation of most types of metals involves an irreversible flow of crystallographic dislocations. This allows for their ductility. The deformation of a metallic shape memory alloy (SMA), on the other hand, is accommodated by a solid-solid phase transition. If deformed in the low-temperature martensitic phase, an SMA can be returned to its original shape by raising its temperature to the point where it changes back to its high-temperature parent phase. When the reverse occurs and the transformation is from parent to martensitic phase, an SMA goes from a high-symmetry to a low-symmetry state in which a number of martensitic variants are produced. We monitored the self-organization of these variants during cycles of periodic thermal driving. This was done using in situ X-ray Photon Correlation Scectroscopy (XPCS), which uses correlation from X-ray speckle to quantify the degree of microstructural change in a material. Our measurements revealed enhanced reversibility in the organization of the martensitic variants as the system evolved during repeated thermal cycling.
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Authors
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Daniel Perez
University of Ottawa
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Mark Sutton
McGill University
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Michael Rogers
University of Ottawa