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Fatigue PDF

This document summarizes key concepts related to fatigue, including: 1) Fatigue is failure under cyclic loading defined by stress parameters like stress range and stress amplitude. Fatigue strength and endurance limits are described using S-N curves. 2) Methods for predicting fatigue life include Goodman, Soderberg, and Gerber relations which define fail-safe stress regions. 3) The fatigue process involves crack initiation, propagation through stages I-III, and final ductile failure. Crack growth can be modeled using the Paris equation and derived equations for fatigue life.

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Shankar Nayak
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views

Fatigue PDF

This document summarizes key concepts related to fatigue, including: 1) Fatigue is failure under cyclic loading defined by stress parameters like stress range and stress amplitude. Fatigue strength and endurance limits are described using S-N curves. 2) Methods for predicting fatigue life include Goodman, Soderberg, and Gerber relations which define fail-safe stress regions. 3) The fatigue process involves crack initiation, propagation through stages I-III, and final ductile failure. Crack growth can be modeled using the Paris equation and derived equations for fatigue life.

Uploaded by

Shankar Nayak
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Fatigue

(12 : 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 20, 21)

Fatigue is failure under cyclic loading

define various parameters (Fig. 12-2) :


min
m - mean stress r - stress range a - stress amplitude R=
max
S - N curves : (Fig.12-3) S could be max, m or a
fatigue strength endurance-limit (35 - 60% of UTS) (for R=-1)

Ferrous alloys Non-ferrous alloys

low vs high cycle fatigue : LCF (<104 cycles) - ductility controlled


HCF - strength controlled effects of CW / radiation

Fatigue Failures occur at very low stresses, 0.4 UTS (e 0.4 UTS)
stress-controlled ()
* Cyclic Deformation : strain-controlled ()
#1 is the common-type in-service (while #2 is much easier to perform in lab)

Life Prediction Methodologies :


Note: effects of R-ratio on fatigue life Fig. 12-6 (top) for constant max, as R N f

Effect of mean stress on fatigue life (Fig. 12-6) for constant a , N f as m

From these data, note that for each m, there exists a range of stresses,
r (=max-min) that can be tolerated (Fig. 12-7) Goodman diagram
Note here --- when r=0 (i.e., monotonic loading) (min=max ~UTS)

Need a master curve to illustrate the safe & failure ranges

KL Murty MSE450 page 1


Goodman, Soderberg, Gerber and Parabolic Relations (Eqs. 12-8) -
x
m
define fail-safe regions (for N ~ specified Nf): a = e [1 ] where 1<x<2
u
a m a
Soderberg : + =1
e o
e
most conservative Elliptic
a m
Goodman : + =1 no failure
e uts
Soderberg
a m 2 m
Gerber : +( ) =1 0 + o u
e uts -

a 2 m 2
Elliptic : ( ) +( ) = 1 least conservative
e uts

Cyclic Stress-Strain Curves : Strain hardening / softening (Figs. 12-10 to 12-12)


=K()n cyclic hardening vs cyclic softening
n'
E p 1
Or, = + = + (Eq. 12-9)
2 2 2 2E 2 K '
' c (Eq. 12-10)
Coffin-Manson Equation (for LCF) : 2 = f (2N)
f
'

Method of Characteristic Slopes : = (2 N f )b + 'f (2 N f )c (Eq. 12-12)


2 E
Su -0.12 0.6 -0.6
Method of Universal Slopes : = 3.5 E Nf + f Nf (Eq. 12-15)
where Su and f are f(cw, x, .) can find for specific Nf or vice versa
(VG example of SS irradiated)

Structural Features / Fatigue : (12-9)


crack initiation - early development of slip bands / deepening of initial cracks (Fig.
23-15)
slip band crack growth - on planes of high shear stress - stage I crack growth
(small crack extension - few grain diameters) - PSBs
crack growth on planes of high tensile stress - stage II crack growth -
due to plastic blunting of crack tip (large crack extension ~ microns per cycle) -
fatigue striations ( cycles, Fig. 12-16) Paris law / region
ultimate ductile failure - (crack at ~45 to the loading direction) eventual
mechanical failure of the remaining ligament
Note : Fatigue occurs even at very low temperatures (i.e., not thermally activated)

KL Murty MSE450 page 2


Fatigue produces a large number of vacancies (PAS, , stored-energy release, etc)

Fatigue Crack Growth : 12-10 (Mechanism Fig. 12-17)

Stage I - Threshold region Stage II - stable / Steady-State Stage III - Unstable


da m
Crack-Growth Rate : stage II dN = C a an , n 1 - 2 and m 2 to 4
CT specimens
Kmin = min a & Kmax = max a (Generally R = 0, = r)
& Kmin=0 for min0 (since cracks cannot propagate under compression)

K = Kmax - Kmin = Y(max - min) a = Y a or Yr a


da
Paris Equation: dN = A ()p , p 2 to 4
Derive Equation for fatigue life, Nf (Eq. 12-25) & tf
af
Nf
da da
dN = so that N f =
dN = ,
A(K)p A(Yr a)p
o
ao
af af
da 1 2
K IC
Or Nf = = (a)-p/2da
where a =
p
A(Yr a) Y 2 max
p AYpr p/2 ao
f 2

ao
{since KIC = Ymax a f }
Two Cases: (1) p=2 and (ii) p2 (eq. 12-25)
Note: Fatigue Crack Growth (FCC) tests are performed @R=0
while Fatigue Life Tests (S-N curves) are usually performed @R=-1 (reverse cycling)
Surface Effects : (12-13)
- surface roughness (Table 12-3 / Fig. 12-20)
- surface residual stress - shot-peening / surface rolling
- changes in surface - surface hardening - carburization / nitriding
can also be improved by solute addition / strain-aging due to interstitials (Fig.12-23)
Corrosion Fatigue : (12-20) Fig. 12-25 - strong effect on Kth & in stage-II
Static Fatigue : Delayed Frature / Hydrogen embrittlement / Fig. 14-18

Thermal Fatigue : = E T

KL Murty MSE450 page 3


In-Class work

A mild plate (E=207 GPa and Kc=100 MPa m ) is subjected to fatigue


(max=180 MPa and min=-40 MPa). If the plate contained an initial through
thickness edge crack of 0.5 mm, how many fatigue cycles are reuquired to break
da
the plate ? {assume dN (m/cycle) = 6.9x10-12 (K)2, (MPa m ), and Y=1.12}

(a) Find af =

(b) Derive equation for Nf and calculate

KL Murty MSE450 page 4

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