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Tutorial Fatigue

This document contains 8 exercises on fatigue analysis using Haigh diagrams for steel materials. The exercises involve generating a Haigh diagram; determining fatigue life from alternating stress levels; computing alternating stress levels from given fatigue lives; and calculating factors of safety for infinite life under bending, axial, and notched load conditions. Design parameters like material properties, component dimensions, loading conditions, and surface finishes are provided. The exercises require using the Haigh diagram to relate mean and alternating stresses to fatigue failure criteria.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
112 views

Tutorial Fatigue

This document contains 8 exercises on fatigue analysis using Haigh diagrams for steel materials. The exercises involve generating a Haigh diagram; determining fatigue life from alternating stress levels; computing alternating stress levels from given fatigue lives; and calculating factors of safety for infinite life under bending, axial, and notched load conditions. Design parameters like material properties, component dimensions, loading conditions, and surface finishes are provided. The exercises require using the Haigh diagram to relate mean and alternating stresses to fatigue failure criteria.

Uploaded by

Mirko Pesce
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FUNDAMENTALS OF MACHINE DESIGN AND DRAWING (A.Y.

2013-2014) TUTORIAL # 1 FATIGUE


EXERCISE # 1

Generate a Haigh diagram at infinite life for a steel material. Take: Rm =1180 MPa, Rp02 =880 MPa, D-1 =480 MPa - fatigue limit for alternate symmetric cycles (R= -1).
EXERCISE # 2

For a steel material, with fatigue limit for alternate symmetric cycles D-1=250 MPa and ultimate tensile strength Rm =600 MPa, compute the alternate stress level corresponding to a life to failure of 105 cycles. [a =339 MPa]
EXERCISE # 3

For a steel material (Rm=700 MPa, D-1=300 MPa) subjected to an alternate symmetric cycle with an alternate stress level of a=420 N/mm2, compute the number of cycles to failure. [N= 6.37 104 cycles]
EXERCISE # 4

A solid circular shaft with diameter d=30 mm is subjected to a bending moment having of mean value Mfm=600 Nm and alternating value Mfa=200 Nm. The shaft is made from steel (Rm=1000 MPa, Rp02 =800 MPa, D-1 =450 MPa) with a machined surface finish (RA = 1.6m). Use the Haigh diagram to compute the factor of safety to infinite life. Consider both the case of average stress constant and alternate stress varying with performance (CASE A) and the case of average stress and alternate stress varying with performance (CASE B). [SF=3.8 (case A); SF= 2.3 (case B)] A 25 x 25 mm square bar with a rough lathe finish (RA = 6.3m) is subjected to a zero to maximum (stress ratio R=0) tension cycle with Fmax=105 N. Use the Haigh diagram (material steel: Rm=1180 MPa, Rp02=880 MPa, D-1=690 MPa) to compute the factor of safety to infinite life. [SF=4.8 (case A); SF= 3.8 (case B)]
EXERCISE # 6 EXERCISE # 5

A machined steel beam with solid circular cross section is subjected to an axial loading cycle between Fmax=5105 N and Fmin=1105 N. Use the Haigh diagram (Rm=1180 MPa, Rp02=880 MPa, D-1=680 MPa) to determine the diameter of the beam which can ensure a factor of safety SF =1.5 with respect to yielding and SF=3 with respect to infinite life (refer to the case of average stress and alternate stress varying with performance). Consider a machined surface finish (RA=1.6 m). For the designed beam, estimate the factor of safety to infinite life for the following axial loading cycles: a) Fmax=0 N and Fmin=-7105 N; b) Fmax=+3.5105 N and Fmin=-3.5105 N; c) Fmax=+7105 N and Fmin=0 N. [d = 52 mm; a)SF= 4.5; b) SF=2.7; c) SF=2.0]

EXERCISE # 7

Mf D d F

Mf F

A notched rotating shaft is subjected to a constant bending moment Mf=250 Nm and to a constant axial force F= 30 kN. Compute the factor of safety with respect to infinite life, considering that it is the bending moment that may increase during operation. Take: D = 45 mm, d = 40 mm, r = 3 mm, RA= 0.8 m Material properties: Rm =640 MPa, Rp02=420 MPa, D-1=300 MPa [SF = 3.4 (CF=1; CS= 0.83; Kf= 1.57)]

EXERCISE # 8

A stepped rotating shaft, loaded by an end-load F, must endure under nominal working conditions. Use the Haigh diagram to compute the factor of safety with respect to yielding and to infinite life. Take: F = 3.5 kN, D = 45 mm, d = 38 mm, r = 1.5 mm, L = 180 mm, l = 90 mm. Material: Rm = 900 MPa, Rp02 = 635 MPa, D-1= 450 MPa, RA= 1.6 m.
Notch geometry at support B

F A L B l r D d

[Yielding SF= 10.7; infinite life SF= 3.4 (CF=0.95; CS= 0.85; Kf= 1.78)]

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