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Structural defects in Fe-Pd-based ferromagnetic shape memory alloys: Tuning transformation properties by ion irradiation and severe plastic deformation

2012, Mayr, S.G., Arabi-Hashemi, A.

Fe-Pd-based ferromagnetic shape memory alloys constitute an exciting class of magnetically switchable smart materials that reveal excellent mechanical properties and biocompatibility. However, their application is severely hampered by a lack of understanding of the physics at the atomic scale. A many-body potential is presented that matched ab inito calculations and can account for the energetics of martensite ↔ austenite transition along the Bain path and relative phase stabilities in the ordered and disordered phases of Fe-Pd. Employed in massively parallel classical molecular dynamics simulations, the impact of order/disorder, point defects and severe plastic deformation in the presence of single- and polycrystalline microstructures are explored as a function of temperature. The model predictions are in agreement with experiments on phase changes induced by ion irradiation, cold rolling and hammering, which are also presented.

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Modulated martensite: Why it forms and why it deforms easily

2011, Kaufmann, S., Niemann, R., Thersleff, T., Rößler, U.K., Heczko, O., Buschbeck, J., Holzapfel, B., Schultz, L., Fähler, S.

Diffusionless phase transitions are at the core of the multifunctionality of (magnetic) shape memory alloys, ferroelectrics and multiferroics. Giant strain effects under external fields are obtained in low symmetric modulated martensitic phases. We outline the origin of modulated phases, their connection with tetragonal martensite and consequences owing to their functional properties by analysing the martensitic microstructure of epitaxial Ni–Mn–Ga films from the atomic to the macroscale. Geometrical constraints at an austenite–martensite phase boundary act down to the atomic scale. Hence, a martensitic microstructure of nanotwinned tetragonal martensite can form. Coarsening of twin variants can reduce twin boundary energy, a process we could observe from the atomic to the millimetre scale. Coarsening is a fractal process, proceeding in discrete steps by doubling twin periodicity. The collective defect energy results in a substantial hysteresis, which allows the retention of modulated martensite as a metastable phase at room temperature. In this metastable state, elastic energy is released by the formation of a 'twins within twins' microstructure that can be observed from the nanometre to the millimetre scale. This hierarchical twinning results in mesoscopic twin boundaries. Our analysis indicates that mesoscopic boundaries are broad and diffuse, in contrast to the common atomically sharp twin boundaries of tetragonal martensite. We suggest that the observed extraordinarily high mobility of such mesoscopic twin boundaries originates from their diffuse nature that renders pinning by atomistic point defects ineffective.