Failure Analysis
Failure Analysis
There will be no design without flaw and there will be no construction without defect. Failures sometimes occur. In several cases the aftermath of failures have a significant impact to the people safety and economic risk.
Liberty Ships
Liberty Ships
Between 1941-45, 2751 liberty ships were manufactured. These are the first ships to be made by welding. 400 of them developed Hull and deck fractures. Some of them broke into two. The low temperature of the North Atlantic caused the steel to be brittle The cracks formed at stress raisers.
The vertical stabilizer of the plane was torn apart during take off The plane flew in the wake of another larger aircraft which caused excessive vertical stabilizer movements(flutter) The pilot gave additional compensating commands which resulted in excessive stresses far beyond the design values causing fatigue failure
Stop Insanity
Failures do occur Investigations teach many lessons Earlier failed parts were disposed of without proper analysis Forensic Analysis of failed parts is an emerging field Insanity in Chinese means When we do the same thing again and again and expect a different result
Failure Mode and Effects Analysis Sequence of Events Analysis Cause and Effect Analysis Fault Tree Analysis
Fracture
The separation of a body into two or more pieces in response to a static stress and at temperatures far below the MP of the material. The applied stress may be
tensile, compressive, shear, or torsional;
Fracture
Based on the ability of a material to experience plastic deformation, two fracture modes are possible: ductile, and brittle fracture. Ductile materials:
substantial plastic deformation with high energy absorption before fracture.
Brittle materials:
little or no plastic deformation with low energy absorption accompanying a brittle fracture.
Ductile fracture
Fracture
In response to an imposed stress, any fracture process involves two steps:
crack formation and propagation.
Ductile Fracture
Ductile fracture:
extensive plastic deformation in the vicinity of an advancing crack. proceeds relatively slowly as the crack length is extended. often said as stable crack.
it resists any further extension unless there is an increase in the applied stress.
Normally there will be evidence of appreciable gross deformation at the fracture surfaces (e.g., twisting and tearing).
Ductile Fracture
Ductile Fracture
Normal fracture process stages:
necking formation of small cavities (microvoids) in the interior of the cross section, as deformation continues, these microvoids enlarge, come together, and coalesce to form an elliptical crack,
which has its long axis perpendicular to the stress direction.
The crack continues to grow in a direction parallel to its major axis by this microvoid coalescence process. Finally, fracture occurs by the rapid propagation of a crack around the outer perimeter of the neck, by shear deformation at an angle of about 45 with the tensile axis
this is the angle at which the shear stress is a maximum.
(a) Initial necking. (b) Small cavity formation. (c) Coalescence of cavities to form a crack.
(d) Crack propagation. (e) Final shear fracture at a 45 angle relative to the tensile direction.
Ductile Fracture
fracture having this characteristic surface contour is called a cupand-cone fracture
because one of the mating surfaces is in the form of a cup, the other like a cone. In this type of fractured specimen, the central interior region of the surface has an irregular and fibrous appearance, which is indicative of plastic deformation.
Brittle Fracture
Brittle fracture:
cracks may spread extremely rapidly, very little plastic deformation. said to be unstable crack,
once it started, crack propagation will continue spontaneously without an increase in magnitude of the applied stress.
Brittle Fracture
For most brittle crystalline materials,
crack propagation corresponds to the successive and repeated breaking of atomic bonds along specific crystallographic planes (cleavage). Type of fracture: transgranular (or transcrystalline),
the fracture cracks pass through the grains.
Brittle Fracture
In some alloys, crack propagation is along grain boundaries (type of fracture: intergranular).
Fracture
Ductile fracture is almost always preferred for two reasons. First,
brittle fracture occurs suddenly and catastrophically without any warning; this is a consequence of the spontaneous and rapid crack propagation. ductile fracture, the presence of plastic deformation gives warning that fracture is imminent, allowing preventive measures to be taken.
Second,
more strain energy is required to induce ductile fracture inasmuch as ductile materials are generally tougher.
Fracture
Under the action of an applied tensile stress,
Most metal alloys are ductile, Ceramics are notably brittle, Polymers may exhibit both types of fracture.
Design engineers are now better equipped to anticipate, and thus prevent, structural failures.
Stress Concentration
The measured fracture strengths for most brittle materials are significantly lower than those predicted by theoretical calculations based on atomic bonding energies.
This discrepancy is explained by the presence of very small, microscopic flaws or cracks that always exist under normal conditions at the surface and within the interior of a body of material.
These flaws are a detriment to the fracture strength because an applied stress may be amplified or concentrated at the tip, the magnitude of this amplification depending on crack orientation and geometry.
The magnitude of the localized stress diminishes with distance away from the crack tip. At positions far removed, the stress is just the nominal stress. Due to their ability to amplify an applied stress in their locale, these flaws are sometimes called stress raisers.
Stress Concentration
Assume that a crack is
an elliptical hole through a plate, oriented perpendicular to the applied stress,
the maximum stress, m , occurs at the crack tip and may be approximated by
Stress Concentration
Sometimes the ratio m/0 is denoted as the stress concentration factor, Kt
A measure of the degree to which an external stress is amplified at the tip of a crack.
Stress Concentration
Stress amplification is not restricted to microscopic defects; it may occur at macroscopic internal discontinuities (e.g., voids), at sharp corners, and at notches in large structures. The effect of a stress raiser is more significant in brittle than in ductile materials.
Stress Concentration
For a ductile material, plastic deformation ensues when the maximum stress exceeds the yield strength.
more uniform distribution of stress in the vicinity of the stress raiser maximum stress concentration < theoretical value.
Yielding and stress redistribution do not occur to any appreciable extent around flaws and discontinuities in brittle materials;
maximum stress concentration = theoretical value.
Stress Concentration
The critical stress c required for crack propagation in a brittle material is described by the expression
Stress Concentration
All brittle materials contain a population of small cracks and flaws that have a variety of sizes, geometries, and orientations.
When the magnitude of a tensile stress at the tip of one of these flaws exceeds the value of this critical stress, a crack forms and then propagates, which results in fracture.
Very small and virtually defect-free metallic and ceramic whiskers have been grown with fracture strengths that approach their theoretical values.
Fracture Toughness
A measure of a materials resistance to brittle fracture when a crack is present For relatively thin specimens, fracture toughness depend on specimen thickness.
Fracture Toughness
For specimen with thickness >> the crack dimensions, fracture toughness independent of thickness;
a condition of plane strain exists. when a load operates on a crack in the mode I, there is no strain component perpendicular to the front and back faces. The value is known as the plane strain fracture toughness, KIc
Fracture Toughness
Brittle materials, for which appreciable plastic deformation is not possible in front of an advancing crack,
have low KIc values and are vulnerable to catastrophic failure.
Ductile materials,
have relatively large KIc values.
Fracture Toughness
KIc depends on many factors, the most influential of are:
temperature, strain rate, microstructure.
Fracture Toughness
Yield strength enhancement:
by solid solution or dispersion additions or by strain hardening
generally decrease KIc. KIc normally increases with reduction in grain size
at constant composition and other micro structural variables.
Fatigue
a form of failure that occurs in structures subjected to dynamic and fluctuating stresses.
Under these circumstances it is possible for failure to occur at a stress level considerably lower than the tensile or yield strength for a static load.
The term fatigue is used because this type of failure normally occurs after a lengthy period of repeated stress or strain cycling. Fatigue is largest cause of failure in metals, estimated approximately 90% of all metallic failures.
Fatigue
Polymers and ceramics (except for glasses) are also susceptible to this type of failure.
Fatigue is catastrophic and insidious, occurring very suddenly and without warning. Fatigue failure is brittle-like in nature even in normally ductile metals, in that there is very little, if any, gross plastic deformation associated with failure.
The process occurs by the initiation and propagation of cracks, and ordinarily the fracture surface is perpendicular to the direction of an applied tensile stress.
Stress S vs. log(N to failure) for each of the specimens are plotted.
The higher the magnitude of the stress, the smaller the number of cycles sustained before failure.
Both of these features indicate the position of the crack tip at some point in time and appear as concentric ridges that expand away from the crack initiation site(s), frequently in a circular or semicircular pattern.
Case hardening: a technique by which both surface hardness and fatigue life are enhanced for steel alloys.
a component is exposed to a carbonaceous (carburizing) or nitrogenous (nitriding) atmosphere at an elevated temperature. A carbon- or nitrogen-rich outer surface layer (or case) is introduced by atomic diffusion from the gaseous phase, normally on the order of 1 mm deep.
Core
The origin of thermal stresses is the restraint to the dimensional expansion and/or contraction that would normally occur in a structural member with variations in temperature.
The magnitude of a thermal stress developed by a temperature change is dependent on the coefficient of thermal expansion and the modulus of elasticity E .
Creep
Creep is a time-dependent and permanent deformation of materials when subjected to a constant load or stress. Creep often occur when materials are placed in service at elevated temperatures and exposed to static mechanical stresses
(e.g., turbine rotors in jet engines and steam generators that experience centrifugal stresses, and high-pressure steam lines).
Creep is normally an undesirable phenomenon and is often the limiting factor in the lifetime of a part.
It is observed in all materials types; for metals it becomes important only for temperatures > 0.4Tm ( absolute melting temperature). Amorphous polymers, which include plastics and rubbers, are especially sensitive to creep deformation.
Creep
GENERALIZED CREEP BEHAVIOR
A typical creep test consists of subjecting a specimen to a constant load or stress while maintaining the temperature constant; deformation or strain is measured and plotted as a function of elapsed time.
Stress (logarithmic scale) versus rupture lifetime (logarithmic scale) for a low carbonnickel alloy at three temperatures.
the better is a materials resistance to creep. Relative to grain size, smaller grains permit more grain-boundary sliding, which results in higher creep rates.
This effect is in opposite to the influence of grain size on the mechanical behavior at low temperatures [i.e., increase in both strength and toughness.
Another is the controlled unidirectional solidification of alloys having specially designed compositions wherein two-phase composites result.