We show how microstructure can arise in first-order ferroelastic structural
transitions, in two and three spatial dimensions, through a local meanfield
approximation of their pseudospin hamiltonians, that include anisotropic
elastic interactions. Such transitions have symmetry-selected physical strains
as their NOP-component order parameters, with Landau free energies that
have a single zero-strain 'austenite' minimum at high temperatures, and
spontaneous-strain 'martensite' minima of NV structural variants at low
temperatures. In a reduced description, the strains at Landau minima induce
temperature-dependent, clock-like ZNV+1 hamiltonians, with
NOP-component strain-pseudospin vectors S pointing to NV+1
discrete values (including zero). We study elastic texturing in five such
first-order structural transitions through a local meanfield approximation of
their pseudospin hamiltonians, that include the powerlaw interactions. As a
prototype, we consider the two-variant square/rectangle transition, with a
one-component, pseudospin taking NV+1=3 values of S=0,±1, as in a
generalized Blume-Capel model. We then consider transitions with two-component
(NOP=2) pseudospins: the equilateral to centred-rectangle (NV=3);
the square to oblique polygon (NV=4); the triangle to oblique (NV=6)
transitions; and finally the 3D cubic to tetragonal transition (NV=3). The
local meanfield solutions in 2D and 3D yield oriented domain-walls patterns as
from continuous-variable strain dynamics, showing the discrete-variable models
capture the essential ferroelastic texturings. Other related hamiltonians
illustrate that structural-transitions in materials science can be the source
of interesting spin models in statistical mechanics.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure