Study on the Improvement of Fatigue Crack Growth Performance of 6061-T6 Aluminum Alloy Subject to Laser Shot Peening

2011 ◽  
Vol 464 ◽  
pp. 391-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Dong Wang ◽  
Jian Zhong Zhou ◽  
Shu Huang ◽  
X.D. Yang ◽  
Z.C. Xu ◽  
...  

In order to enhance mechanical property and restrain crack growth of 6061-T6 aluminum alloy, laser shot peening (LSP) was employed to induce compressive residual stress and plastic deformation on the surface of metal. The FEA code ABAQUS and MSC. Fatigue were used to simulate crack growth of Compact tension (CT) specimens treated by LSP. The numerical simulation results showed that LSP can effectively inhibit the crack growth, decrease the crack growth rate as well as increase the final crack size, and as a consequence, fatigue life was extended. Adding peening times could get deeper compressive residual stress field which strengthen material surface and restrain crack growth, but the fatigue stress intensity factor threshold decreases.

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 299
Author(s):  
Kumiko Tanaka ◽  
Daichi Shimonishi ◽  
Daisuke Nakagawa ◽  
Masataka Ijiri ◽  
Toshihiko Yoshimura

Cr–Mo steel and Ni–Cr–Mo steel have higher strength and hardness than carbon steel, and they are occasionally used in harsh environments where high temperatures and high pressures are simultaneously applied in an oxidizing gas atmosphere. In general, in order to improve the fatigue strength of a material, it is important to impart compressive residual stress to the material surface to improve crack resistance and corrosion resistance. Conventionally, the most famous technique for imparting compressive residual stress by surface modification of a material is shot peening processing. However, in shot peening processing, there is concern that particles adhere to the surface of the material or the surface of the material becomes rough. Therefore, in this study high temperature and high-pressure cavitation was applied and the material surface was processed at the time of collapse. A theoretical and experimental study on a new processing method giving compressive residual stress was carried out. In the present study, we will report stress relaxation behavior due to the heat of cavitation in processed Cr–Mo steel and Ni–Cr–Mo steel.


Author(s):  
H. Bae ◽  
M. Ramulu ◽  
A. Hossain

Shot peening is a cold working process used to produce a compressive residual stress to modify mechanical properties of metals. It causes impacting a surface with shots with significant force to create plastic deformation. The compressive residual stresses developed by shot peening process helps to avoid the propagation of micro-cracks exist in surface. Shot peening process is often used in aircraft industries to relieve tensile stresses built up in the grinding process, and replace them with beneficial compressive residual stresses. Shot peening has been developed to increase the fatigue strength of metallic parts. Compressive residual stress and surface hardening induced by shot peening process are found beneficial to increase the fatigue life and the resistance to stress corrosion cracking within the metallic component. Even though shot peening has been used for more than 50 years, a review of published papers indicates a lack of studies in numerical modeling. In particular, the effect of complex shot peening process to predict the target material responds to the multiple impacts of shots is not fully revealed. Most studies have investigated the fundamental mechanism and characteristics of fatigue improvement by single shot peening, and have studied the compressive residual stress induced by single normal impact on the surface of the specimen. However, single impact model is appropriate and efficient for sensitivity studies, local plastic effect, and indentation estimation. It is well known that the residual stress by single shot model is not suitable for practical use. The residual stress field from multi impacts is the resultant sum of all the fields by repeated and progressive impacts. It is not feasible to extrapolate results from the single impact model to a practical shot peening process with multiple impacts. Therefore, this research attempts to conduct a microscale modeling to study the shot peening effects of aluminum alloy responds to single and multiple impacts. First, a single shot impact model, representing single shot peening process, has been developed for the estimation of indentations at different velocities. The numerical simulations has been performed with the finite element software code LS-DYNA. The validations of the numerical simulations has been made from experimentally measured surface roughness data. Once the finite element code of single shot peening model is validated, additional numerical models are developed to simulate multiple shot peening process, using multiple impact shots. The multiple impact model are developed for the estimation of the residual stress field.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 419
Author(s):  
Jin Gan ◽  
Zi’ang Gao ◽  
Yiwen Wang ◽  
Zhou Wang ◽  
Weiguo Wu

Ship hatch corner is a common structure in a ship and its fatigue problem has always been one of the focuses in ship engineering due to the long–term high–stress concentration state during the ship’s life. For investigating the fatigue life improvement of the ship hatch corner under different shot peening (SP) treatments, a series of fatigue tests, residual stress and surface topography measurements were conducted for SP specimens. Furthermore, the distributions of the surface residual stress are measured with varying numbers of cyclic loads, investigating the residual stress relaxation during cyclic loading. The results show that no matter which SP process parameters are used, the fatigue lives of the shot–peened ship hatch corner specimens are longer than those at unpeened specimens. The relaxation rate of the residual stress mainly depends on the maximum compressive residual stress (σRSmax) and the depth of the maximum compressive residual stress (δmax). The larger the values of σRSmax and δmax, the slower the relaxation rates of the residual stress field. The results imply that the effect of residual stress field and surface roughness should be considered comprehensively to improve the fatigue life of the ship hatch corner with SP treatment. The increase in peening intensity (PI) within a certain range can increase the depth of the compressive residual stress field (CRSF), so the fatigue performance of the ship hatch corner is improved. Once the PI exceeds a certain value, the surface damage caused by the increase in surface roughness will not be offset by the CRSF and the fatigue life cannot be improved optimally. This research provides an approach of fatigue performance enhancement for ship hatch corners in engineering application.


2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Singh ◽  
R.A. Khan ◽  
M.L. Aggarwal

 Austenitic stainless steel cannot be hardened by any form of heat treatment, in fact, quenching from 10000C merely softens them. They are usually cold worked to increase the hardness. Shot peening is a cold working process that changes micro-structure as well as residual stress in the surface layer. In the present work, the compressive residual stress and fatigue strength of AISI 304 austenitic stainless steel have been evaluated at various shot peening conditions. The improvement in various mechanical properties such as hardness, damping factors and fatigue strength was noticed. Compressive residual stress induced by shot peening varies with cyclic loading due to relaxation of compressive residual stress field. The consideration of relaxed compressive residual stress field instead of original compressive residual stress field provides reliable fatigue design of components. In this paper, the exact reductions in weight and control of mechanical properties due to shot peening process are discussed. 


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (7) ◽  
pp. 0703009
Author(s):  
周建忠 Zhou Jianzhong ◽  
王呈栋 Wang Chengdong ◽  
黄舒 Huang Shu ◽  
杨小东 Yang Xiaodong ◽  
徐增闯 Xu Zengchuang ◽  
...  

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