2010
DOI: 10.1002/zamm.200900364
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Determination and transport of phase transformation yield surfaces for shape memory alloys

Abstract: One important feature in the description of the shape memory alloys is the determination of the yield surfaces of phase transformation. They can be presented as surfaces in the phase transformation martensitic strain space. In this paper the transition from this stress to the classical stress space is performed. Two application cases concerning bi-axial loading (bi-tension and tension-torsion) are discussed in details.

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Cited by 4 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…As for the shape of the transformation surface itself, it appears that quadratic anisotropic yield criteria which are commonly used for a wide variety of materials in numerical computations, such as Hill [19] or its more general form, Tsai-Wu [20] do not fit well the data obtained by experiments. In the mentioned models [7,18,20], the particular pear shape of the Prager equation introduced for SMAs by Patoor et al [3] seems to fit better the experimental observations.…”
Section: Phase Transformation Of Anisotropic Shape Memory Alloys: Thementioning
confidence: 92%
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“…As for the shape of the transformation surface itself, it appears that quadratic anisotropic yield criteria which are commonly used for a wide variety of materials in numerical computations, such as Hill [19] or its more general form, Tsai-Wu [20] do not fit well the data obtained by experiments. In the mentioned models [7,18,20], the particular pear shape of the Prager equation introduced for SMAs by Patoor et al [3] seems to fit better the experimental observations.…”
Section: Phase Transformation Of Anisotropic Shape Memory Alloys: Thementioning
confidence: 92%
“…They rely on a transformation criterion that depends on the invariants of the stress tensor. Following the normality rule for the transformation strains, associativity to such criterion is characterized by the invariance of transformation power with respect to loading direction [18]. At the point of saturation, an analytical expression of the transformation strains can thus be expressed.…”
Section: Phase Transformation Of Anisotropic Shape Memory Alloys: Thementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…If there is any, the originality of this investigation comes from the fact that the three-dimensional behavior of SMAs integrates the intrinsic asymmetry between tension and compression in the fracture analysis. However, it is well known that, the SMAs behaviour is strongly non linear (Gibeau et al 2010) and this observation must be integrated into the model because a stress redistribution occurs around the crack tip. Moreover, the different elastic properties (for instance, the Young modulus) of the mother phase and the product phases can also be included.…”
Section: Comments and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…It has been found that the "yield" (transformation start stress in stress induced phase transformation) surface does neither really match the Huber-von Mises yield criterion nor the Tresca yield criterion. Determination and transport of phase transformation yield surfaces for shape memory alloys are also given by Gibeau, Laydi and Lexcellent (2010). "Yield" surfaces of shape memory alloys and their applications were studied by Huang (1999), Lim and McDowell (1999), Gall et al (1998), Novák and Šittner (2004) The "yield" surfaces of four polycrystalline SMAs (NiTi, NiAl, CuZnGa, and CuAlNi) are investigated by Lexcellent et al (2002;2007;.…”
Section: Phase Transformation Yield Criterion Of Shape-memory Alloysmentioning
confidence: 99%