A Study on the Low Cycle Fatigue Behavior of the Steel for Shipbuilding Industry

2005 ◽  
Vol 297-300 ◽  
pp. 10-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyung Su Kim ◽  
Byung Ok Kim ◽  
Young Kwan Kim ◽  
Chang Hwan Lee ◽  
Sung Won Lee

Recently, most of fatigue cracks in ship structures are reported within a few years after delivery. This type of fatigue characteristics cannot be explained adequately by the S-N curve based on high cycle fatigue. Calculation results under critical loading conditions reveal that stress magnitude higher than three times the yield stress occurs at some critical locations. It shows the fatigue cracks are related to low cycle fatigue. But the existing recommended design procedures in maritime industry do not properly cover low cycle fatigue problems. This work represents the first step in an effort to develop a design code that addresses low cycle fatigue problems. Low cycle fatigue test for uniform round specimen made of base/weld metal and for cruciform welded joint are carried out under constant amplitude alternating load, controlled by strain. Strain-cycle curves for the base metal and weld joints show good agreement with published data as well as some code recommended design curves.

2012 ◽  
Vol 268-270 ◽  
pp. 87-91
Author(s):  
Jian Jun Cui ◽  
Bing Chao Li ◽  
Guo Hua Zhang ◽  
Jian Xin Zhang ◽  
Zuo Shan Wei ◽  
...  

The tensile and low cycle fatigue tests were carried out on alumina short fibers reinforced Al-Si piston alloy composites (Al-Si MMCs). Three Al-Si MMCs reinforced with 10, 17 and 25 vol.% of alumina short fibers were prepared to investigate the effects of volume fraction on tensile and low cycle fatigue properties at room temperature (RT) and 350°C. The results showed that the tensile strength decreased with the increasing of volume fraction of fibers at RT and was slight different at 350°C. Among the three MMCs, the 17%-MMCs showed highest stress level under the low cycle fatigue tests. The fatigue cracks were usually initiated from the clustered and large size fibers near the surface of specimen, propagated along the fiber/matrix interface at RT and grew rapidly by means of broken the fibers at 350°C.


2012 ◽  
Vol 622-623 ◽  
pp. 1340-1344
Author(s):  
Jian Jun Cui ◽  
Bing Chao Li ◽  
Guo Hua Zhang ◽  
Jian Xin Zhang ◽  
Zuo Shan Wei ◽  
...  

The tensile and low cycle fatigue tests were carried out on alumina short fibers reinforced Al-Si piston alloy composites (Al-Si MMCs). Three Al-Si MMCs reinforced with 10, 17 and 25 vol.% of alumina short fibers were prepared to investigate the effects of volume fraction on tensile and low cycle fatigue properties at room temperature (RT) and 350°C. The results showed that the tensile strength decreased with the increasing of volume fraction of fibers at RT and was slight different at 350°C. Among the three MMCs, the 17%-MMCs showed highest stress level under the low cycle fatigue tests. The fatigue cracks were usually initiated from the clustered and large size fibers near the surface of specimen, propagated along the fiber/matrix interface at RT and grew rapidly by means of broken the fibers at 350°C.


2014 ◽  
Vol 618 ◽  
pp. 120-124
Author(s):  
Yuan Yuan Wang ◽  
Bao Sen Wang ◽  
Li Jia Chen

High temperature low cycle fatigue properties and fracture behavior of Inconel 625 nickel-base superalloy welding joint at 760oC were investigated under fully reversed total strain-controlled mode. The fatigue life and cyclic stress-strain data were analyzed to determine the individual strain fatigue parameters. It is noted that the welding joint exhibits the cyclic strain hardening and stability. The fatigue cracks initiate predominantly on the free surface of fatigue specimens and propagate in an intergranular mode or a mixed transgranular and intergranular mode.


2013 ◽  
Vol 815 ◽  
pp. 875-879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Wei Zhou ◽  
Yi Zhu He ◽  
Yu Wan Cen ◽  
Jian Qing Jiang

Low-cycle fatigue (LCF) tests were performed with different strain amplitudes from 0.4% to 1.2% at room temperature (RT) to investigate fatigue life and fracture morphology of TP347H austenitic stainless steels. The results show that there is initial cyclic hardening for a few cycles, followed by continuous softening until fatigue failure at all strain amplitudes in stress response curves. The fatigue life of the steels follows the strain-life Coffin-Manson law. Fracture morphology shows that fatigue cracks initiate from the specimen free surface instead of the interior of the specimen, and ductile fracture appears during LCF loading. More sites of crack initiation and quicker propagation rate of fatigue crack at high strain amplitudes than those at low strain amplitudes are responsible for reduced fatigue life with the increasing of strain amplitude.


2019 ◽  
Vol 795 ◽  
pp. 29-34
Author(s):  
Tian Hao Ma ◽  
Le Chang ◽  
Chang Yu Zhou

Low cycle fatigue (LCF) tests are performed on CP-Tiat different temperatures (293K,423K and 523K). It is found that the fatigue life of CP-Tidecreases with temperature. A short cycle hardening phenomenon occurs at the beginning of cyclic deformationat 293K and 423K, followed by cyclic softening untilfailure. At 523K, cycle hardening isexhibited throughout the entire cycle until thefracture. The fatigue-life curves obtained from the tests are constructed using Coffin-Manson-Basquin model. According to the relationship between the four parameters of Coffin-Manson-Basquin model and temperature, the temperature-based life prediction model is further proposed. Scanning electron microscopy observation of fatigue fractures showsthat the fatigue cracks of CP-Tiat 423K and 523K under different strain amplitudes initiate on the surface of fatigue specimens and extend to the fracture zone by the transgranular mode.


Author(s):  
Kyung Su Kim ◽  
Byung Ok Kim ◽  
Young Kwan Kim ◽  
Chang Hwan Lee ◽  
Sung Won Lee

Crystals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianfeng Ma ◽  
Jishen Jiang ◽  
Wenjie Zhang ◽  
Hui-ji Shi ◽  
Jialin Gu

This paper aims to understand the effect of local recrystallization (RX) on the low cycle fatigue fracture of a turbine-blade single crystal nickel-based superalloy. The fatigue life of the single crystal superalloy was evidently decreased by local recrystallization. In single crystal specimens, casting porosity is the preferential fatigue crack initiation site, which is followed by crystallographic crack propagation along one or several octahedral slip planes. For all RX specimens, fatigue cracks preferred to initiate from local recrystallized grains and propagated through the recrystallized grains in a transgranular manner, followed by crystallographic crack propagation in the substrate single crystal superalloy. Moreover, fatigue tests indicated that locally recrystallized specimens exhibited temperature dependent fracture modes, i.e., transgranular cracking dominated at 550 °C, whereas intergranular cracking was preferred at 850 °C. Evident oxidation of fracture surfaces and strength degradation of grain boundaries at 850 °C was evidenced by scanning electronic microscopic observations. The present study emphasized the need to evaluate the effect of recrystallization according to the working conditions of turbine components, i.e., the local temperature.


1974 ◽  
Vol 188 (1) ◽  
pp. 321-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Evans ◽  
G. P. Tilly

The low-cycle fatigue characteristics of an 11 per cent chromium steel, two nickel alloys and two titanium alloys have been studied in the range 20° to 500°C. For repeated-tension stress tests on all the materials, there was a sharp break in the stress-endurance curve between 103 and 104 cycles. The high stress failures were attributed to cyclic creep contributing to the development of internal cavities. At lower stresses, failures occurred through the growth of fatigue cracks initiated at the material surface. The whole fatigue curve could be represented by an expression developed from linear damage assumptions. Data for different temperatures and types of stress concentration were correlated by expressing stress as a fraction of the static strength. Repeated-tensile strain cycling data were represented on a stress-endurance diagram and it was shown that they correlated with push-pull stress cycles at high stresses and repeated-tension at low stresses. In general, the compressive phase tended to accentuate cyclic creep so that ductile failures occurred at proportionally lower stresses. Changes in frequency from 1 to 100 cycle/min were shown to have no significant effect on low-cycle fatigue behaviour.


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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