Effect of Relative Mean Strain in High-Temperature Low-Cycle Fatigue of a Stainless Steel

1975 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 238-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thang Bui-Quoc ◽  
Andre Biron

The effect of the relative mean strain in the low-cycle fatigue of a stainless steel (AISI 304) in air at 650°C and at a constant strain rate (4 × 10−3s−1) is studied. Two modes of strain measurement (axial and diametral) were used separately in nonzero mean strain experiments with controlled axial strain in real time. The effect of the relative mean strain on the fatigue life has been found to be negligible in the range of lives 200 ⩽ N ⩽ 10,000 cycles when the mean strain does not exceed 1.5 times the total range. This effect, however, becomes important when the mean strain is several times the total strain range. In addition, for N < 200 cycles at failure, the effect of even a small value of the mean strain appears to be significant. The extension of a method previously developed is presented for establishing the high-temperature fatigue behavior under isothermal conditions with positive mean strain. On the basis of the results of a short-term tensile test, the technique gives predictions in good agreement with experimental data.

1970 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Dubuc ◽  
A. Biron

Low-cycle fatigue tests have been carried out at 2 cpm on a pressure vessel steel at 350 deg C (662 deg F). The total strain range was fixed for each test and the minimum (or mean) strain in some cases was constant (zero minimum value), in others increased uniformly in time at a predetermined rate. It was found that variations in the mean strain up to 0.5 percent/hour had no significant influence on the results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 944 ◽  
pp. 1067-1075
Author(s):  
Wen Lan Wei ◽  
Li Hong Han ◽  
Yao Rong Feng ◽  
Jian Xun Zhang ◽  
Hang Wang

The service conditions of thermal recovery wells make the casing repeatedly bear the tension and compression load and form low cycle fatigue. Meanwhile, many factors, such as pre-strain and creep, lead to the formation of asymmetrical low cycle fatigue (R≠-1), which is the low cycle fatigue behavior under the influence of mean strain. This work studied the effect of mean strain on low cycle fatigue behavior of N80Q steel. Different strain amplitude conditions were selected for low cycle fatigue test, which were 0.5%, 0.7%, 1.0%, 1.5% and 2.0% respectively. Then tests at mean strains of-0.8%, 0%, 0.5% and 1.0% were conducted under constant strain amplitude. And the microstructure and fracture surface of the material after the tests were characterized using scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, respectively. The results show that the mean strain makes the fatigue life reduce significantly under the condition of constant strain amplitude, and is related to the amplitude of the mean strain. The value of the mean strain and the strain amplitude will ultimately affect the fatigue life. And the fatigue life is related to the maximum absolute value of strain and has a linear relationship in the double logarithmic coordinate system. The SEM results of fracture morphology show that the brittleness feature of the crack growth area with high mean strain decreases significantly. And the fracture cross-section observation shows that the crack propagation is transgranular propagation. The TEM results show that a large number of dislocations pile-up is formed at lath subgrain boundary.


1991 ◽  
Vol 51-52 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Sang Rok Lee ◽  
Hak Joo Lee ◽  
Jin Oh Chung ◽  
Sae-Wook Oh ◽  
Chung-Weon Huh ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jean Alain Le Duff ◽  
Andre´ Lefranc¸ois ◽  
Jean Philippe Vernot

In February/March 2007, The NRC issued Regulatory Guide “RG1.207” and Argonne National Laboratory issued NUREG/CR-6909 that is now applicable in the US for evaluations of PWR environmental effects in fatigue analyses of new reactor components. In order to assess the conservativeness of the application of this NUREG report, Low Cycle Fatigue (LCF) tests were performed by AREVA NP on austenitic stainless steel specimens in a PWR environment. The selected material exhibits in air environment a fatigue behavior consistent with the ANL reference “air” mean curve, as published in NUREG/CR-6909. LCF tests in a PWR environment were performed at various strain amplitude levels (± 0.6% or ± 0.3%) for two loading conditions corresponding to a simple or to a complex strain rate history. The simple loading condition is a fully reverse triangle signal (for comparison purposes with tests performed by other laboratories with the same loading conditions) and the complex signal simulates the strain variation for an actual typical PWR thermal transient. In addition, two various surface finish conditions were tested: polished and ground. This paper presents the comparisons of penalty factors, as observed experimentally, with penalty factors evaluated using ANL formulations (considering the strain integral method for complex loading), and on the other, the comparison of the actual fatigue life of the specimen with the fatigue life predicted through the NUREG report application. For the two strain amplitudes of ± 0.6% and ± 0.3%, LCF tests results obtained on austenitic stainless steel specimens in PWR environment with triangle waveforms at constant low strain rates give “Fen” penalty factors close to those estimated using the ANL formulation (NUREG/6909). However, for the lower strain amplitude level and a triangle loading signal, the ANL formulation is pessimistic compared to the AREVA NP test results obtained for polished specimens. Finally, it was observed that constant amplitude LCF test results obtained on ground specimens under complex loading simulating an actual sequence of a cold and hot thermal shock exhibits lower combined environmental and surface finish effects when compared to the penalty factors estimated on the basis of the ANL formulations. It appears that the application of the NUREG/CR-6909 in conjunction with the Fen model proposed by ANL for austenitic stainless steel provides excessive margins, whereas the current ASME approach seems sufficient to cover significant environmental effects for representative loadings and surface finish conditions of reactor components.


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