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contributor authorXiaochuang Wu
contributor authorDavid S. Grummon
contributor authorThomas J. Pence
date accessioned2017-05-08T23:59:52Z
date available2017-05-08T23:59:52Z
date copyrightJanuary, 1999
date issued1999
identifier issn0094-4289
identifier otherJEMTA8-26995#67_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/122270
description abstractThe most common shape memory actuation procedure involves a shape memory element that works against a conventional elastic biasing element. Actuation is provided by the movement of the contact interface separating the two elements. The interface then occupies one location at high temperature and another location at low temperature. Certain applications call for switching between two separate interface locations, both of which are stable at a common ambient temperature. A shape memory element working against a conventional elastic biasing element cannot generally give such capability. However, two shape memory elements working against each other does give this capability, provided that the ambient temperature supports stress-free martensite, and provided as well that the contact interface thermally isolates the elements during short duration heating spikes which trigger such a switch. There is an obvious operational benchmark involving one element with fully oriented martensite and the other element with random martensite. The benchmark operation exchanges these states between the two elements, in which case the device stroke follows immediately from the material’s transformation strain. This benchmark behavior is not achievable due to elastic strain effects. Here we analyze the achievable behavior of such a device using a recent model for shape memory behavior. This model tracks the state of the shape memory material in terms of austenite and two variant martensite. This enables the determination of the device’s shakedown behavior in terms of repeatable per-stroke strain delivery, and also gives the temperature excursions necessary for the associated full displacement.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleSimulation of Cyclic Displacement by Counterpoised Shape Memory Elements
typeJournal Paper
journal volume121
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Engineering Materials and Technology
identifier doi10.1115/1.2816002
journal fristpage67
journal lastpage74
identifier eissn1528-8889
keywordsDisplacement
keywordsShapes
keywordsSimulation
keywordsTemperature
keywordsStress
keywordsLow temperature
keywordsSwitches
keywordsHeating AND High temperature
treeJournal of Engineering Materials and Technology:;1999:;volume( 121 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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