4.7 Article

Monoclinic angle, shear response, and minimum energy pathways of NiTiCu martensite phases from ab initio calculations

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages 59-67

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2019.07.050

Keywords

Shape memory alloy; Martensitic phase transition; Ab initio calculations; Minimum energy pathway

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [180101955]
  2. Pawsey Supercomputing Centre
  3. Australian Government
  4. Government of Western Australia
  5. National Computational Infrastructure

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Ti50Ni50-xCux alloys are observed to exhibit multiple martensitic transformations from B2 to an orthorhombic B19 and a monoclinic B19' phase. In addition, DFT calculations have predicted a B19 '' phase with a higher monoclinic angle as the thermodynamically stable ground state. This study investigated the effects of Cu content and shear stress on the monoclinic angles, phase stabilities of the various martensites, the minimum energy pathways, and the relative total energies among the phases in this pseudo-equiatomic Ti(Ni50-xCux) system. A new monoclinic phase (B19(M)) with a monoclinic angle lower than that of B19' was found at above a critical Cu content. This confirms the formation of an intermediate phase in the martensitic transformation sequence of the pseudo-equiatomic Ti(Ni50-xCux) system but contradicts the crystal structure of the experimentally observed phase. It was found that the monoclinic angles of both B19(M) and B19 '' decrease with increasing the magnitude of an opposing shear stress to their monoclinic distortion. At above certain critical values of the opposing shear stress, the B19(M) and B19 '' phases destabilise and transform to lower monoclinic angle phases. In addition, the evidence suggests that the experimentally observed monoclinic B19' phase is in fact a distorted B19 '' with a reduced monoclinic angle under an opposing shear stress. With the same argument, the experimentally reported B19 phase is a metastable phase formed under the effect of an opposing shear stress to the monoclinic distortion of B19(M). (C) 2019 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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