Publication | Closed Access
Numerical and Experimental Evaluation of the Damping Properties of Shape-Memory Alloys
28
Citations
8
References
2006
Year
EngineeringSevere Plastic DeformationChemical CompositionMechanical EngineeringShape-memory AlloysMechanicsMicrostructure-strength RelationshipSuperelastic Shape-memory AlloysMaterials ScienceMechanical BehaviorSolid MechanicsDamping PropertiesPlasticityThermomechanical ProcessingMicrostructureHysteresis SizeDynamic Constitutive BehaviorExperimental EvaluationAlloy DesignConstitutive ModelingVibration ControlMechanics Of MaterialsHigh Strain Rate
This paper presents and compares two different uniaxial constitutive models for superelastic shape-memory alloys (SMAs), suitable to study the dependence of the stress-strain relationship on the loading-unloading rate. The first model is based on the inclusion of a direct viscous term in the evolutionary equation for the martensite fraction and it shows how the material response is bounded between two distinct rate-independent models. The second model is based on a rate-independent evolutionary equation for the martensite fraction coupled with a thermal balance equation. Hence, it considers mechanical dissipation as well as latent heat and includes the temperature as a primary independent variable, which is responsible of the dynamic effects. The ability of both models to reproduce the observed reduction of damping properties through the modification of the hysteresis size is discussed by means of several numerical simulations. Finally, the capacity of the constitutive equations to simulate experimental data from uniaxial tests performed on SMA wires and bars of different size and chemical composition is shown.
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