Abstract
In the near-equiatomic NiTi alloy, certain processing factors significantly affect the shape recovery temperature T f and the extent of shape recovery while others do not. The lowest recovery temperature and the best shape recovery were obtained by annealing between 450 and 500 °C. Varying the annealing temperature resulted in the largest change in these two parameters, causing an increase of 20 °C in T f and a decrease of 13% in the shape recovery (in one sample batch) if the annealing temperature was increased much above 500 °C. Increasing the maximum strain (in the range between 0% and 8%) induced an increase of 10 °C in T f at 500 °C with larger increases at other annealing temperatures but without any effect on the extent of shape recovery. Altering the annealing time had a relatively small effect. A recovery-resistant physical constraint raised the effective T f but if the constraint was maintained at a sufficiently high temperature the transformation occurred, plastic deformation resulted and permanent partial loss of shape memory was suffered. T f extrapolates to nearly the same temperature, at zero strain, for all the annealing temperatures near 500 °C. Similarly, the final temperature of the transformation from matensite to β phase (zero strain) is the same for all the annealing temperatures. This strongly suggests that each annealing temperature yields a high temperature B2 phase with a slightly different structure which interacts differently with stress. Although this study is based on only two batches of NiTi wires of similar composition, it is expected that qualitatively similar variations with processing factors occur in all NiTi alloys which exhibit shape memory.
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