Martensitic materials show a complex, hierarchical microstructure containing
structural domains separated by various types of twin boundaries. Several
concepts exist to describe this microstructure on each length scale, however,
there is no comprehensive approach bridging the whole range from the nano- up
to the macroscopic scale. Here, we describe for a Ni-Mn-based Heusler alloy how
this hierarchical microstructure is built from scratch with just one key
parameter: the tetragonal distortion of the basic building block at the atomic
level. Based on this initial block, we introduce five successive levels of
nested building blocks. At each level, a larger building block is formed by
twinning the preceding one to minimise the relevant energy contributions
locally. This naturally explains the occurrence of different types of twin
boundaries. We compare this scale-bridging approach of nested building blocks
with experiments in real and reciprocal space. Our approach of nested building
blocks is versatile as it can be applied to the broad class of functional
materials exhibiting diffusionless transformations.Comment: 25 pages, including supplementar