Achieving superelasticity in additively manufactured Ni-lean NiTi by crystallographic design
Jia-Ning Zhu (TU Delft - Team Vera Popovich)
K. Liu (TU Delft - Team Marcel Sluiter)
T. Riemslag (TU Delft - Team Vera Popovich)
F.D. Tichelaar (Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft, TU Delft - QN/Afdelingsbureau)
E. Borisov (Peter the Great Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic University)
Xiyu Yao (Southern University of Science and Technology )
Anatoly Popovich (Peter the Great Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic University)
R. Huizenga (TU Delft - Team Amarante Bottger)
Marcel Hermans (TU Delft - Team Marcel Hermans)
V. Vera (TU Delft - Team Vera Popovich)
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Abstract
Superelastic metallic materials possessing large recoverable strains are widely used in automotive, aerospace and energy conversion industries. Superelastic materials working at high temperatures and with a wide temperature range are increasingly required for demanding applications. Until recently, high-temperature superelasticity has only been achievable with multicomponent alloys fabricated by complex processes. In this study, a novel framework of multi-scale models enabling texture and microstructure design is proposed for high-performance NiTi fabrication via laser powder bed fusion. Based on the developed framework, a Ni-lean Ni(49.4 at.%)-Ti alloy is, for the first time, endowed with a 4% high-temperature compressive superelasticity. A 001 texture, unfavorable for plastic slip, is created to realize enhanced functionality. The unprecedented superelasticity can be maintained up to 453 K, which is comparable with but has a wider superelastic temperature range (∼110 K) than rare earth alloyed NiTi alloys, previously only realizable with grain refinement, and other complicated post-processing operations. At the same time, its shape memory stability is also improved due to existing textured 100 martensite and intergranular precipitation of Ti2NiOx. This discovery reframes the way that we design superior performance NiTi based alloys through directly tailoring crystallographic orientations during additive manufacturing.