Crystallography of the martensitic transformation between Ni2In-type hexagonal and TiNiSi-type orthorhombic phases
Tingting Zhang, Yuanyuan Gong, Bin Wang, Dongyu Cen, Feng Xu

TL;DR
This study uncovers the crystallographic relationship and habit plane between hexagonal and orthorhombic phases in MnMX alloys, providing new insights into their martensitic transformation crucial for solid refrigerant applications.
Contribution
First detailed crystallography of the martensitic transformation between Ni2In-type hexagonal and TiNiSi-type orthorhombic phases in MnMX alloys.
Findings
Identified the orientation relationship as [4-2-23]h//[120]o & (01-10)h//(001)o.
Determined the habit plane as {-2113.26}h.
WLR theory calculations agree with experimental measurements.
Abstract
MnMX (M = Co or Ni, X = Si or Ge) alloys, experiencing structural transformation between Ni2In-type hexagonal and TiNiSi-type orthorhombic phases, attract considerable attention due to their potential applications as room-temperature solid refrigerants. Although lots of studies have been carried out on how to tune this transformation and obtain large entropy change in a wide temperature region, the crystallography of this martensitic transformation is still unknown. The biggest obstacle for crystallography investigation is to obtain a bulk sample, in which hexagonal and orthorhombic phases coexist, because the MnMX alloys will fragment into powders after experiencing the transformation. For this reason, we carefully tune the transformation temperature to be slightly below 300 K. In that case, a bulk sample with small amounts of orthorhombic phases distributed in hexagonal matrix is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsShape Memory Alloy Transformations · Advanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices · Intermetallics and Advanced Alloy Properties
