Cychc pre-stress increases subsequent fatigue crack growth rate in 2024-T3Sl ahrminum ahoy. This increase in growth rate, caused by the pre-stress, and the increased rate, caused by temper embrittlement as observed by Ritchie and Knott, cannot be explained by the crack tip blunting model alone. Each
An analysis of the growth of short fatigue cracks
β Scribed by A.J. McEvily; D. Eifler; E. Macherauch
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 984 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-7944
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β¦ Synopsis
Ah&met-The behavior of short fatigue cracks cannot be analysed by linear elastic methods because of large scale plasticity effects as well as a breakdown in the stress intensity factor correlation of fatigue crack growth rates for crack sizes less than a millimeter in length. In the present paper a number of modifications are introduced to the linear elastic approach to establish a new parameter which is capable of correlating both long crack and short crack fat&m crack growth data. These modifications include the use of a material constant, r,; an allowance for large scale plasticity effects; allowance for the development of crack closure; and the incorporation of the fatigue crack growth threshold. The new parameter is used with reasonable success in calculating fatigue crack growth behavior of short cracks in notched and unnotched spechnens, and comparing with experimental data. In addition the analysis leads to a rationale for the dependence of the stress amplitude at the endurance level on the mean stress in a manner consistent with Gerber's parabolic relationship.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The theoretical study is advanced to describe quantitatively the crack propagation under cyclic loads. The main assumptions accepted are: (a) a crack grows by loading during every cycle, and (b) the specific dissipation energy is a material constant. The latter contains. the known concept by Irwin a