Abstract
Summary form only given. Magnetic shape memory materials are expected to have potential for a variety of actuating devices and sensors. Magnetic-field-induced rearrangement of the crystallographic domains (twin variants) can produce a large strain similar to a stress-induced one. We have found a giant magnetic field-induced strain approximately 10% at ambient temperature in a magnetic field less then 1 T in NiMnGa seven-layered martensitic phase. The strain is contributed by twin boundary motion which was confirmed by different experimental methods. From the analysis of X-ray diffraction data it was found that crystal structure of this phase is nearly orthorhombic having lattice parameters at ambient temperature a=0.619 nm, b=0.580 nm and c=0.553 nm (in cubic parent phase coordinates). The magnetic anisotropy properties of this phase were determined on the single-variant constrained samples using the magnetization curves M(H) recorded along [100], [010] and [001] directions. We demonstrate that low twinning stresses and a high level of magnetic anisotropy energy are the critical factors for the observation of a giant magnetic field induced strain.
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