Shape-memory behavior ls the ability of ccrwin materials to recover, on heating, apparently plastic deformation sustained below a critical temperature. Some materials have good shape-memory behavior as single crystals but little or none as polycrystals, while others have good shape-memory behavior even as polycrystals. Bhattacharya and Kohn (1996. 1997) have proposed a framework to understand this difference. They use energy minimization and the Taylor estimate to argue that the recoverable strains in a polycrystal depend not only on the texture of the polycrystal and the transformation, but critically on the change in symmetry during the underlying martensitic phase transformation. Their results agree with the experimental observations. Shu and Bhattacharya (1997) have also used the
Taylor estimate to study the effect of texture in polycrys- tals of Nickel-Titanium and Copper based shape-memory alloys. The use of the Taylor estimate was evaluated in some detail in Bhattacharya and Kohn ( 1997) and more recently in Shu and Bhattacharya (1997) and Shu (1997). In this short report, we summarize the model of recoverable strain and discuss some results that allow us to evaluate the Taylor estimate