Jugan Zhang , Yongqing Wang , Chi Zhang , Jiayi Yan , Zhigang Yang , Hao Chen , Hanwei Fu , Qing Yin , Ye Liu , Yun Bai
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Granular bright facets (GBFs) are frequently observed adjacent to inclusions and within fish-eye areas in the fatigue fractures of high-strength steels under very-high-cycle fatigue (VHCF), considered as a characteristic fracture feature of VHCF. Previous understanding on GBF formation emphasizes the occurrence of nanocystallization in microstructure. In this study, however, the same morphology can also be observed under high-cycle fatigue (HCF). GBF, although closer to fatigue crack initiator and experiencing more stress cycles than the peripheral part of fish-eye (PPFE), exhibits rougher surface morphology in the absence of accumulated plastic strain in microstructure, manifesting relieved crack surface wear. This indicates that the traditional theories on GBF formation for VHCF becomes invalid for HCF. The root cause for GBF formation under HCF is analyzed to be the presence of residual stress around inclusions, which reduces the contact pressure of fatigue crack surfaces inducing wear relief. Accordingly, an analytical model capable of predicting GBF thickness with the effects of HCF conditions and steel properties taken into consideration is established. The model yields accurate predictions of GBF thickness with various loading stresses and inclusion diameters, validated by experimental observations. This study provides theoretical guidance for HCF fracture analysis and fatigue life prediction.
期刊介绍:
Typical subjects discussed in International Journal of Fatigue address:
Novel fatigue testing and characterization methods (new kinds of fatigue tests, critical evaluation of existing methods, in situ measurement of fatigue degradation, non-contact field measurements)
Multiaxial fatigue and complex loading effects of materials and structures, exploring state-of-the-art concepts in degradation under cyclic loading
Fatigue in the very high cycle regime, including failure mode transitions from surface to subsurface, effects of surface treatment, processing, and loading conditions
Modeling (including degradation processes and related driving forces, multiscale/multi-resolution methods, computational hierarchical and concurrent methods for coupled component and material responses, novel methods for notch root analysis, fracture mechanics, damage mechanics, crack growth kinetics, life prediction and durability, and prediction of stochastic fatigue behavior reflecting microstructure and service conditions)
Models for early stages of fatigue crack formation and growth that explicitly consider microstructure and relevant materials science aspects
Understanding the influence or manufacturing and processing route on fatigue degradation, and embedding this understanding in more predictive schemes for mitigation and design against fatigue
Prognosis and damage state awareness (including sensors, monitoring, methodology, interactive control, accelerated methods, data interpretation)
Applications of technologies associated with fatigue and their implications for structural integrity and reliability. This includes issues related to design, operation and maintenance, i.e., life cycle engineering
Smart materials and structures that can sense and mitigate fatigue degradation
Fatigue of devices and structures at small scales, including effects of process route and surfaces/interfaces.