Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

How shape-memory materials remember

04.26.10 | American Physical Society

Meta Quest 3 512GB

Meta Quest 3 512GB enables immersive mission planning, terrain rehearsal, and interactive STEM demos with high-resolution mixed-reality experiences.

X-ray studies and fundamental calculations are helping physicists gain molecular level insight into the workings of some magnetic shape-memory materials, which change shape under the influence magnetic fields. Shape-memory materials could potentially serve as light weight, compact alternatives to conventional motors and actuators. But developing practical devices will require creating materials that exhibit much larger changes in shape than most of the known shape-memory materials. A paper appearing in the April 25 issue of Physical Review Letters reports on the efforts of a team of Japanese physicists who probed the changes in a magnetic shape-memory material at the molecular scale. The work is highlighted with a Viewpoint article by Antoni Planes (Universitat de Barcelona) in the April 25 edition of APS Physics ( physics.aps.org ).

The new research focused on a shape-memory alloy made up of nickel, manganese and tin. In its ideal form, the alloy is a crystal with each element occupying specific crystal locations relative to one another. In some versions, however, excess manganese atoms replace some of the tin atoms. Although the compositional change is slight, it can have significant effects on the alloy's behavior. X-ray spectroscopy allowed the researchers to observe the microscopic characteristics of the alloy to see precisely how the excess manganese atoms affect the alloy's behavior.

By studying the way that composition affects a shape-memory material, and comparing measurements to theoretical calculations, it will be possible to understand what makes the materials work, and allow physicists to develop new and improved varieties shape-changing metals.

Also in Physics:

Does quantum mechanics play a role in critical phenomena?

Quantum interference effects can, in theory, lead to the emergence of new particles carrying exotic quantum numbers at a critical point. Rajiv Singh (University of California, Davis) wonders, how good is the evidence that this happens?

About APS Physics:

APS Physics ( http://physics.aps.org ) publishes expert written commentaries and highlights of papers appearing in the journals of the American Physical Society.

Physical Review Letters

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

James Riordon
riordon@aps.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
American Physical Society. (2010, April 26). How shape-memory materials remember. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L55DVZ3L/how-shape-memory-materials-remember.html
MLA:
"How shape-memory materials remember." Brightsurf News, Apr. 26 2010, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L55DVZ3L/how-shape-memory-materials-remember.html.