A new approach to heat-treating NiTi micro-components

K. L. Cheng, C. Y. Chung

    Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

    Abstract

    A new approach to heat-treat near equi-atomic NiTi samples was studied. Instead of heat-treating samples inside vacuum furnaces, an in-situ electrical power resistance joule heating method was employed. This method eliminated the bothering measurement of the sample temperature and employed the electrical resistance joule heating to heat-treat the samples. An optimum electrical power to heat-treat the samples was determined to be 2 watts. The shape memory phase transformation characteristics show strong dependence on the electrical annealing power. R-phase transformation was also found sensitive to the electrical annealing power. High electrical annealing power would suppress the R-phase transformation process but in turn promotes samples with higher phase transformation temperatures for actuating purposes. Moreover electrically cycling samples at very high power is also detrimental to the R-phase transformations. This new method is proved to have the same heat treatment effect on the NiTi wire equivalent to the traditionally thermal heat treatment method.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)317-320
    JournalMaterials Science Forum
    Volume394-395
    Publication statusPublished - 2002
    EventProceedings of the International Conference on Shape Memory and Superelastic Technologies and Shape Memory Materials (SMST-SMM 2001) - Kumning, China
    Duration: 2 Sept 20016 Sept 2001

    Research Keywords

    • Electrical Cycling
    • Micro-Components
    • NiTi Shape-Memory Alloy
    • Resistance Heating

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