scholarly journals A Temperature-Dependent Model of Shape Memory Alloys Considering Tensile-Compressive Asymmetry and the Ratcheting Effect

Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 3116
Author(s):  
Longfei Wang ◽  
Peihua Feng ◽  
Ying Wu ◽  
Zishun Liu

Tensile-compressive asymmetry and the ratcheting effect are two significant characteristics of shape memory alloys (SMAs) during uniaxial cyclic tests, thus having received substantial attention in research. In this study, by redefining the internal variables in SMAs by considering the cyclic accumulation of residual martensite, we propose a constitutive model for SMAs to simultaneously reflect tensile-compressive asymmetry and the cyclic ratcheting effect under multiple cyclic tests. This constitutive model is temperature dependent and can be used to reasonably capture the typical features of SMAs during tensile-compressive cyclic tests, which include the pseudo-elasticity at higher temperatures as well as the shape-memory effect at lower temperatures. Moreover, the proposed model can predict the cyclic mechanical behavior of SMAs subjected to applied stresses with different peak and valley values under tension and compression. Agreement between the predictions obtained from the proposed model and the published experimental data is observed, which confirms that the proposed novel constitutive model of SMAs is feasible.

Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1393
Author(s):  
Xiaochang Duan ◽  
Hongwei Yuan ◽  
Wei Tang ◽  
Jingjing He ◽  
Xuefei Guan

This study develops a general temperature-dependent stress–strain constitutive model for polymer-bonded composite materials, allowing for the prediction of deformation behaviors under tension and compression in the testing temperature range. Laboratory testing of the material specimens in uniaxial tension and compression at multiple temperatures ranging from −40 ∘C to 75 ∘C is performed. The testing data reveal that the stress–strain response can be divided into two general regimes, namely, a short elastic part followed by the plastic part; therefore, the Ramberg–Osgood relationship is proposed to build the stress–strain constitutive model at a single temperature. By correlating the model parameters with the corresponding temperature using a response surface, a general temperature-dependent stress–strain constitutive model is established. The effectiveness and accuracy of the proposed model are validated using several independent sets of testing data and third-party data. The performance of the proposed model is compared with an existing reference model. The validation and comparison results show that the proposed model has a lower number of parameters and yields smaller relative errors. The proposed constitutive model is further implemented as a user material routine in a finite element package. A simple structural example using the developed user material is presented and its accuracy is verified.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 1143-1160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walid Khalil ◽  
Alain Mikolajczak ◽  
Céline Bouby ◽  
Tarak Ben Zineb

In this article, we propose a finite element numerical tool adapted to a Fe-based shape memory alloy structural analysis, based on a developed constitutive model that describes the effect of phase transformation, plastic sliding, and their interactions on the thermomechanical behavior. This model was derived from an assumed expression of the Gibbs free energy taking into account nonlinear interaction quantities related to inter- and intragranular incompatibilities as well as mechanical and chemical quantities. Two scalar internal variables were considered to describe the phase transformation and plastic sliding effects. The hysteretic and specific behavior patterns of Fe-based shape memory alloy during reverse transformation were studied by assuming a dissipation expression. The proposed model effectively describes the complex thermomechanical loading paths. The numerical tool derived from the implicit resolution of the nonlinear partial derivative constitutive equations was implemented into the Abaqus® finite element code via the User MATerial (UMAT) subroutine. After tests to verify the model for homogeneous and heterogeneous thermomechanical loadings, an example of Fe-based shape memory alloy application was studied, which corresponds to a tightening system made up of fishplates for crane rails. The results we obtained were compared to experimental ones.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 1163-1177
Author(s):  
Canjun Li ◽  
Zhen Zhou ◽  
Yazhi Zhu

Super-elastic shape memory alloys are widely used in structural engineering fields due to their encouraging super-elasticity and energy dissipation capability. Large-size shape memory alloy bars often present significant residual strains after unloading, which emphasizes the necessity of developing a residual strain effect–coupled constitutive model to predict well the performance of shape memory alloy–based structures. First, this article experimentally studies the hysteretic behavior of NiTi shape memory alloy bars under quasi-static loading conditions and investigates the effects of cyclic numbers and strain amplitudes on residual strain. Second, a concept of cumulative transformation strain is preliminarily introduced into a phenomenological Lagoudas model. A uniaxial constitutive model for shape memory alloy bars including the residual strain is proposed. By using OpenSees platform, numerical simulations of shape memory alloy bars are conducted—the results of which indicate that the proposed model can accurately capture the hysteretic behavior of shape memory alloys. The predicted residual strains show a good agreement to experimental results, which demonstrates the desirable efficiency of the proposed model.


Author(s):  
Saeid Shakiba ◽  
Aghil Yousefi-Koma ◽  
Moosa Ayati

In this study, a constitutive model based on Liang-Rogers’s relations is developed to characterize the effect of the excitation frequency in the hysteresis of shape memory alloys. Shape memory alloys are good candidates as smart actuators because of their high strain and power density, although the complex hysteresis behavior barricades their usage. Although constitutive models are one of the most potent methods to predict the shape memory alloys behavior, they cannot consider the effect of excitation frequency in active applications. In this paper, the Liang-Rogers model is modified to consider this effect using a linear relation between the excitation frequency and martensite transformation temperatures. A shape memory alloy-driven actuator as a morphing wing is employed to characterize the frequency effect on shape memory alloy hysteresis. Experimental results show that the hysteresis is widened when the excitation frequency increases. The modeling results show that the original model significantly fails to predict the correct behavior when the frequency increases, whereas the proposed model can adequately handle the frequency effect on the behavior of the shape memory alloy-driven actuator.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-37
Author(s):  
Mengqian Zhang ◽  
Theocharis Baxevanis

Abstract A 3D finite-strain constitutive model for shape memory alloys (SMAs) is proposed. The model can efficiently describe reversible phase transformation from austenite to self-accommodated and/or oriented martensite, (re)orientation of martensite variants, minor loops, latent heat effects, and tension–compression asymmetry based on the Eulerian logarithmic strain and the corotational logarithmic objective rate. It further accounts for transformation volume contraction, smooth thermomechanical response, temperature dependence of the critical force required for (re)orientation, temperature and load dependence of the hysteresis width, asymmetry between forward and reverse phase transformation, and is flexible enough to address the deformation response in the concurrent presence of several phases, i.e., when austenite, self-accommodated and oriented martensite co-exist in the microstructure. The ability of the proposed model to describe the aforementioned deformation response characteristics of SMAs under multiaxial, thermomechanical, nonproportional loading relies on the set of three independent internal variables, i.e., the average volume fraction of martensite variants, their preferred direction, and the magnitude of the induced inelastic strain, that further allow for an implicit description of a fourth internal variable, the volume fraction of oriented as opposed to self-accommodated martensite. The calibration of the model and its numerical implementation in an efficient scheme are presented. The model is validated against experimental results associated with complex thermomechanical paths, including tension/compression/torsion experiments and the efficiency of its numerical implementation is verified with simulations of the response of a biomedical superelastic SMA stent and an SMA spring actuator.


Author(s):  
Fan Wang ◽  
Lin-Xiang Wang

Shape Memory Alloys (SMA) have become a material with great application prospects because of their unique characteristics and superior properties. A phenomenological constitutive model for SMA is constructed in the current paper. The proposed constitutive model is based on the phenomena observed in the experiment, and Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) are used to simulate part of the characteristics of SMA. The parameter identification method is also proposed, where Back-Propagation (BP) algorithm and the nonlinear optimisation algorithm are used at the same time. The numerical experiment has been carried out, which can well capture the constitutive relationship curve obtained from uniaxial tension and compression experiments of SMA, thus the model can be verified. The model can also describe the phase transformation characteristics of SMA well.


Author(s):  
Francis R. Phillips ◽  
Daniel Martin ◽  
Dimitris C. Lagoudas ◽  
Robert W. Wheeler

Shape memory alloys (SMAs) are unique materials capable of undergoing a thermo-mechanically induced, reversible, crystallographic phase transformation. As SMAs are utilized across a variety of applications, it is necessary to understand the internal changes that occur throughout the lifetime of SMA components. One of the key limitations to the lifetime of a SMA component is the response of SMAs to fatigue. SMAs are subject to two kinds of fatigue, namely structural fatigue due to cyclic mechanical loading which is similar to high cycle fatigue, and functional fatigue due to cyclic phase transformation which typical is limited to the low cycle fatigue regime. In cases where functional fatigue is due to thermally induced phase transformation in contrast to being mechanically induced, this form of fatigue can be further defined as actuation fatigue. Utilizing X-ray computed microtomography, it is shown that during actuation fatigue, internal damage such as cracks or voids, evolves in a non-linear manner. A function is generated to capture this non-linear internal damage evolution and introduced into a SMA constitutive model. Finally, it is shown how the modified SMA constitutive model responds and the ability of the model to predict actuation fatigue lifetime is demonstrated.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 12-20
Author(s):  
Najmeh Keshtkar ◽  
Johannes Mersch ◽  
Konrad Katzer ◽  
Felix Lohse ◽  
Lars Natkowski ◽  
...  

This paper presents the identification of thermal and mechanical parameters of shape memory alloys by using the heat transfer equation and a constitutive model. The identified parameters are then used to describe the mathematical model of a fiber-elastomer composite embedded with shape memory alloys. To verify the validity of the obtained equations, numerical simulations of the SMA temperature and composite bending are carried out and compared with the experimental results.


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