Methods to predict the S-N curves of high-strength steels in the very high cycle fatigue (VHCF) regime are reviewed. At the same time, a new prediction in form of Basquin's equation is proposed based on the prediction of fatigue strengths in both high cycle fatigue regime and very high cycle fatigue
The significance of microstructural barriers during fatigue of a duplex steel in the high- and very-high-cycle-fatigue (HCF/VHCF) regime
✍ Scribed by Ulrich Krupp; Helge Knobbe; Hans-Jürgen Christ; Philipp Köster; Claus-Peter Fritzen
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 943 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0142-1123
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✦ Synopsis
Austenitic-ferritic duplex steels are used for structural applications when high strength in combination with excellent corrosion resistance is required. Many of these applications imply cyclic loading and hence, fatigue damage needs to be considered for dimensioning. Most dimensioning strategies make use of the fatigue-limit concept. However, while the original fatigue-limit concept is based on the idea that existing slip bands or microcracks are blocked by microstructural barriers like grain or phase boundaries, more recent research work has shown that metallic structures may fail far below the conventional fatigue limit even at very high numbers of cycles to fracture. The present paper deals with the observation of local plasticity and fatigue damage in the VHCF regime by means of high-frequency fatigue testing in combination with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and with electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD). The results reveal that fatigue damage in the VHCF regime indeed causes the formation of slip bands followed by initiation and propagation of microstructurally short cracks in a very localized manner, manifesting itself by heat generation. The SEM observations and measurements of slip band geometries were correlated with calculations using a finite-element and a numerical short-crack model, which take the real two-phase microstructure and its elastic/plastic anisotropy into account and allow the prediction of both: (i) the fatigue crack initiation sites and (ii) microcrack propagation rates.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The sizes of the 'granular bright facet' (GBF) areas on fracture surfaces of specimens subjected to very high cycle fatigue for two high strength spring steels were measured in a field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM) and compared with the estimated values, and a good agreement was foun