Introduction To Nitinol®
Nitinol is the name of one member of a class of metals
known as Shape
Memory Alloys. The general phenomenon was discovered
in the 1930's. Shape Memory Alloys have can take two
different crystal structures. They have a "hot" phase
in which the material is generally stiffer and has a
higher yield point, and a "cool" phase which
is less stiff and has a lower yield strength. In the
lower crystal phase they are generally superelastic.
This means they can be deformed far more than other metals
of the same general family- like 10 times more. They
can be formed into a shape at higher temperature, cooled,
then formed to a different shape around room temperature.
When heated, they return to the shape they had at the
high temperature. There are several known metal combinations
that have these properties.
Nitinol was developed by the Naval Ordnance Laboratory.
The name comes its composition and the discovery team
who first recognized the potential of this powerful alloy
(NIckel/ TItanium / Naval Ordinance Laboratory).
Nitinol alloys typically are made of 55%-56% Nickel
and 44%-45% Titanium. Small changes in composition can
significantly impact the properties of the material.
There are two primary categories of Nitinol. The first,
known as "SuperElastic", is characterized by
extraordinary kink resistance and flexibility. The second
category, "Shape Memory" alloys, is valued
for the Nitinol's capacity to recover a pre-set shape
when heated above its transformation temperature. The
first category is often used for orthodontics- braces,
wires, etc- and for eyeglasses. Dynalloy® makes shape
memory alloys, which are primarily useful for actuators,
used in many diffrent mechanical devices.
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