Abstract

For Ni–Mn–Ga ferromagnetic shape memory alloys, a large magnetic-field-induced strain could be reached through the reorientation of martensitic variants in the martensite state. Owing to the collective and displacive nature of the austenite to martensite transformation, a certain orientation relationship (OR) between the parent and the product phase is required to minimize the transformation strain and the strain energy generated, which brings about self-accommodating groups of martensitic variants with specific orientation correlations. In this work, the microstructural and crystallographic characteristics of martensitic variants in a polycrystalline Ni 50Mn 30Ga 20 alloy were investigated by electron backscatter diffraction analysis. With accurate orientation measurement on inherited martensitic variants, the local orientations of parent austenite grains were predicted using four classical OR for the martensitic transformation. Furthermore, a specific OR, namely the Pitsch relation with (1 0 1) A//(1 2 ¯ 10 ¯ ) 7M and [1 0 1 ¯ ] A//[ 10 ¯ 10 ¯ 1] 7M, was unambiguously determined by considering the magnitude of discontinuity between the lattices of the product and parent phases and the structural modulation of the incommensurate 7M modulated martensite. The present procedure to determine the OR, without recourse to the presence of retained austenite, is in general applicable to a variety of materials with modulated superstructure for insight into their martensitic transformation processes.

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