JOURNAL ARTICLE

FATIGUE CRACK GROWTH IN DUCTILE MATERIALS UNDER CYCLIC COMPRESSIVE LOADING

R. Hermann

Year: 1994 Journal:   Fatigue & Fracture of Engineering Materials & Structures Vol: 17 (1)Pages: 93-103   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract— Mode I fatigue crack growth has been studied in notched specimens of 7017‐T651 aluminium alloy subjected to fully compressive cyclic loads. The specimens were first subjected to a deliberate compressive preload which causes plastic deformation at the notch tip. On unloading, this region developed a residual tensile stress field and on subsequent compressive cyclic loading in laboratory air, a fatigue crack was nucleated at the notch and grew at a diminishing rate until it stopped. The final crack length increased with an increase in the value of the initial compressive preload and with an increase in the negative value of the applied cyclic mean load. To gain a better understanding of crack growth in residual stress fields, the magnitude and extent of residual stress induced from compressive preloads have been analysed. This was achieved when extending the notch by cutting while recording the change in the back face strain. From residual strain models it was found that the fatigue crack growth was confined to a region of tensile cyclic stress within the residual stress field. The effective stress intensity range was investigated at selected mean loads and amplitudes, for correlating purposes, using both the compliance technique and by invoking the crack growth rate behaviour of the alloy. Finally, a brief discussion of the fracture morphology of cracks subjected to cyclic compression is presented.

Keywords:
Materials science Crack closure Paris' law Composite material Preload Residual stress Ultimate tensile strength Cyclic stress Compressive strength Structural engineering Fracture mechanics Engineering

Metrics

44
Cited By
2.72
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
20
Refs
0.88
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Fatigue and fracture mechanics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanics of Materials
Metal Forming Simulation Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry

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