scholarly journals Thermomechanical fatigue failure investigation on a single crystal nickel superalloy turbine blade

2016 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 284-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rongqiao Wang ◽  
Kanghe Jiang ◽  
Fulei Jing ◽  
Dianyin Hu
JOM ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 30-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Pan ◽  
Qingyan Xu ◽  
Baicheng Liu ◽  
Jiarong Li ◽  
Hailong Yuan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Nagaraj K. Arakere ◽  
Gregory Swanson

High Cycle Fatigue (HCF) induced failures in aircraft gas turbine and rocket engine turbopump blades is a pervasive problem. Single crystal nickel turbine blades are being utilized in rocket engine turbopumps and jet engines throughout industry because of their superior creep, stress rupture, melt resistance and thermomechanical fatigue capabilities over polycrystalline alloys. Currently the most widely used single crystal turbine blade superalloys are PWA 1480/1493, PWA 1484, RENE’ N-5 and CMSX-4. These alloys play an important role in commercial, military and space propulsion systems. Single crystal materials have highly orthotropic properties making the position of the crystal lattice relative to the part geometry a significant factor in the overall analysis. The failure modes of single crystal turbine blades are complicated to predict due to the material orthotropy and variations in crystal orientations. Fatigue life estimation of single crystal turbine blades represents an important aspect of durability assessment. It is therefore of practical interest to develop effective fatigue failure criteria for single crystal nickel alloys and to investigate the effects of variation of primary and secondary crystal orientation on fatigue life. A fatigue failure criterion based on the maximum shear stress amplitude [Δτmax] on the 24 octahedral and 6 cube slip systems, is presented for single crystal nickel superalloys (FCC crystal). This criterion reduces the scatter in uniaxial LCF test data considerably for PWA 1493 at 1200F in air. Additionally, single crystal turbine blades used in the alternate advanced high-pressure fuel turbopump (AHPFTP/AT) are modeled using a large-scale 3D finite element (FE) model. This FE model is capable of accounting for material orthotrophy and variation in primary and secondary crystal orientation. Effects of variation in crystal orientation on blade stress response are studied based on 297 FE model runs. Fatigue lives at critical points in the blade are computed using FE stress results and the failure criterion developed. Stress analysis results in the blade attachment region are also presented. Results presented demonstrates that control of secondary and primary crystallographic orientation has the potential to significantly increase a component’s resistance to fatigue crack growth without adding additional weight or cost.


Author(s):  
Xi Liu ◽  
Dianyin Hu ◽  
Bin Zhang ◽  
Rongqiao Wang

Probabilistic-based design can efficiently quantify the risk and improve the reliability of the turbine blade. In this context, a probabilistic framework concerning the uncertainty quantification for the turbine blade’s TMF life based on the cyclic damage accumulation (CDA) method and Bayesian inference is proposed in this study. Firstly, the damage factors in the critical plane are obtained by the finite element method using Walker constitutive model, during which the discretization error is calibrated using Richardson extrapolation method. After that, the probabilistic TMF life model is established using CDA theory, in which the uncertainty of the material parameters is quantified using Bayesian inference. Finally, TMF life prediction on a single crystal nickel superalloy turbine blade is conducted using the probabilistic framework considering uncertainty quantification. The accuracy and validity of the proposed method is revealed by the comparison between the numerical and experimental results of real turbine blades.


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