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Fatigue damage mechanisms in the nickel-based superalloy UDIMET720Brooks, Rebecca Ruth January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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The Observation of Dislocation Morphologies in Asymmetric Strain of IF SteelWang, Tain-de 30 January 2007 (has links)
The low cycle fatigue test of IF steel was controlled at 0.6%, 0.4%, 0.2%, and 0.1% strain amplitude until the specimens cracking. After 10000 cycles at 0.4% strain amplitude, changed the strain amplitude from 0.4% to 0.2%. We chose the steps of the low cycle fatigue test under reducing amplitude at 1000, 10000, and 20000 cycles. In addition, after 10000 cycles at 0.6% strain amplitude, changed the strain amplitude from 0.6% to 0.2%. We chose the steps of the low cycle fatigue test under reducing amplitude at 3000, 20000 and 100000 cycles. Then we used electron microscope to observe the dislocation structure, and knew the dislocation morphology of evolution process under reducing amplitude.
The dislocation structure evolution of IF steel at low strain amplitude (0.1%, 0.2%) during low cycle fatigue developed the loop patches, dislocation walls, and dislocation cells step-by-step by increasing fatigue cycles. However, the dislocation structure evolution would be changed in the low cycle fatigue under reducing amplitude.
We could observe that the dislocation cells were broken to the loop patches in different form. Attest to the dislocation morphology was changed under reducing amplitude. After 10000 cycles at 0.4% strain amplitude, change the strain amplitude from 0.4% to 0.2%., we could observe that the dislocation cells were broken to the loop patches and vein structure. And after 100000 cycles under changed loading amplitude from 0.6% to 0.2%, large area of open domains and some loop patches can be observed.
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Physics - based Thermo - Mechanical Fatigue Model for Life Prediction of High Temperature AlloysGulhane, Abhilash Anilrao 05 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / High-temperature alloys have been extensively used in many applications, such as furnace muffles, fuel nozzles, heat-treating fixtures, and fuel nozzles. Due to such conditions, these materials should have resistance to cyclic loading, oxidation, and high heat. Although there are numerous prior experimental and theoretical studies, there is insufficient understanding of application of the unified viscoplasticity theory to finite element software for fatigue life prediction.
Therefore, the goal of this research is to develop a procedure to implement unified viscoplasticity
theory in finite element (FE) model to model the complex material deformation
pertaining to thermomechanical load and implement an incremental damage lifetime rule to predict the thermomechanical fatigue life of high-temperature alloys.
The objectives of the thesis are:
1. Develop a simplified integrated approach to model the fatigue creep deformation
under the framework of ‘unified viscoplasticity theory’
2. Implement a physics - based crack growth damage model into the framework
3. Predict the deformation using the unified viscoplastic material model for ferritic
cast iron (Fe-3.2C-4.0Si-0.6Mo) SiMo4.06
4. Predict the isothermal low cycle fatigue (LCF) and LCF-Creep life using the
damage model
In this work, a unified viscoplastic material model is applied in a FE model with a combination of Chaboche non-linear kinematic hardening, Perzyna rate model, and static recovery model to model rate-dependent plasticity, stress relaxation, and creep-fatigue interaction. Also, an incremental damage rule has been successfully implemented in a FE model. The calibrated viscoplastic model is able to correlate deformations pertaining to isothermal LCF, LCF-Creep, and thermal-mechanical fatigue (TMF) experimental deformations. The life predictions from the FE model have been fairly good at room temperature (20°C), 400°C, and 550°C under Isothermal LCF (0.00001/s and 0.003/s) and LCF-Creep tests.
The material calibration techniques proposed for calibrating the model parameters resulted
in a fairly good correlation of FE model derived hysteresis loops with experimental
hysteresis, pertaining to Isothermal LCF (ranging from 0.00001/s to 0.003/s), Isothermal
LCF-Creep tests (withhold time) and TMF responses. In summary, the method and models developed in this work are capable of simulating material deformation dependency on temperature, strain rates, hold time, therefore, they are capable of modeling creep-stress relaxation and fatigue interaction in high-temperature alloy design.
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Methods Of Extrapolating Low Cycle Fatigue Data To High Stress AmplitudesRadonovich, David Charles 01 January 2007 (has links)
Modern gas turbine component design applies much effort into prediction and avoidance of fatigue. Advances in the prediction of low-cycle fatigue (LCF) cracks will reduce repair and replacement costs of turbine components. These cracks have the potential to cause component failure. Regression modeling of low-cycle fatigue (LCF)test data is typically restricted for use over the range of the test data. It is often difficult to characterize the plastic strain curve fit constants when the plastic strain is a small fraction of the total strain acquired. This is often the case with high strength, moderate ductility Ni-base superalloys. The intent of this project is to identify the optimal technique for extrapolating LCF test results into stress amplitudes approaching the ultimate strength. The proposed method to accomplish this is by finding an appropriate upper and lower bounds for the cyclic stress-strain and strain-life equations. Techniques investigated include: monotonic test data anchor points, strain-compatibility, and temperature independence of the Coffin-Manson relation. A Ni-base superalloy (IN738 LC) data set with fully reversed fatigue tests at several elevated temperatures with minimal plastic strain relative to the total strain range was used to model several options to represent the upper and lower bounds of material behavior. Several high strain LCF tests were performed with stress amplitudes approaching the ultimate strength. An augmented data set was developed by combining the high strain data with the original data set. The effectiveness of the bounding equations is judged by comparing the bounding equation results with the base data set to a linear regression model using the augmented data set.
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noneLin, Hong-Ren 25 July 2001 (has links)
none
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The low cycle fatigue behavior of aluminum alloy based particulate compositesLiu, Changqi January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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A Low Cycle Fatigue Testing Framework for Evaluating the Effect of Artifacts on the Seismic Behavior of Moment FramesAbbas, Ebrahim K. 01 December 2015 (has links)
Structural steel components erected in real buildings include a wide range of artifacts. In this case, the word artifact is used to describe both defects and fasteners that create discontinuities in the steel such as notches, nicks, welds, powder actuated fasteners, self-drilling screws, repaired defects, and others. Although artifacts occur in real structures and their presence may affect the ductility of elements subjected to large inelastic strains, there is a dearth of experimental data on the seismic behavior of structural systems with artifacts. For instance, full-scale testing of moment resisting connections is expensive which makes it economically infeasible to experimentally examine the wide range of possible artifact types, artifact locations, and structural configurations. A framework has been developed for evaluating the effect of artifacts on special moment resisting frame (SMRF) plastic hinge regions using relatively economical coupon tests. Cyclic bend tests and monotonic tension tests on flat plate coupons that include artifacts are used to calibrate fracture parameters for different low cycle fatigue models such as the Cyclic Void Growth Model (CVGM), Stress-Weighted Damage Model (SWDM) and Cyclic Damage Plasticity Model (CDPM) which are then used in conjunction with finite element (FE) models to predict fracture initiation in full-scale SMRF connections. The framework is general and can be applied to many types of artifacts and seismic structural systems. Fracture propagation has been studied also using CDPM for full-scale tests using FE finite element software LS-DYNA. Alternatively, recommendations for future work is proposed for developing a new test setup, studying artifacts sensitivity to material thickness, and a method of demonstrating equivalence for the artifacts. / Ph. D.
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High-cycle fatigue / low-cycle fatigue interactions in Ti-6Al-4VKnipling, Keith Edward 28 February 2003 (has links)
The largest single cause of failure in fan and compressor components in the cold frontal sections of commercial and military gas turbine engines has been attributed to high cycle fatigue (HCF). Additionally, both high-cycle fatigue (HCF) and lowcycle fatigue (LCF) loadings are widely recognized as unavoidable during operation of these components and because the classic Linear Damage Rule (LDR) neglects to account for the synergistic interaction between these damage contributors, dangerous over predictions of lifetime can result.
Combined low-cycle fatigue / high-cycle fatigue (HCF/LCF) loadings were investigated in smooth Ti-6Al-4V. The specimens were subjected to a variable amplitude block loading history comprised of completely-reversed (R = -1) tensioncompression overloads followed by constant-amplitude zero-tension (R = 0) minor cycles. Axial specimens were excised from forgings representative of turbine engine fan blade forgings, and consisted of approximately 60% primary α in a matrix of lamellar α + β.
Data are reported for smooth specimens of Ti-6Al-4V subjected to both constant amplitude and variable amplitude loadings. The axial specimens were prepared according to two distinct specimen conditions: low stress ground and longitudinallypolished (LSG+LP) and stress-relieved and chemically milled (SR+CM) conditions. Significantly longer lives were observed for the LSG+LP specimen condition under both constant and variable amplitude loading, due to the presence of a beneficial compressive surface residual stress. The presence of this residual stress was confirmed by x-ray diffraction, and its magnitude was of the order of 180 MPa (~20% of the yield stress). In either specimen condition, no appreciable effect of periodic overloads on the life of subsequent minor cycles was observed. / Master of Science
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Únavové chování hořčíkových slitin AZ31 a AZ61 / Fatigue Behaviour of AZ31 and AZ61 Magnesium AlloysGejdoš, Pavel January 2014 (has links)
This doctoral thesis deals with the fatigue behaviour of AZ31 and AZ61 magnesium alloy casted by advanced methods of casting squeeze casting. Based on the regression functions and measured fatigue data were determined fatigue characteristics of these alloys. The work also extends into the area of fatigue cracks in the AZ31 alloy. Were measured fatigue crack propagation rate on modified cylindrical specimens. The paper also outlines the possibilities for describing the fatigue behaviour of AZ61 alloy in extremely low-cycle fatigue.
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The Mechanics and Design of a Non-tearing Floor Connection using Slotted Reinforced Concrete BeamsAu, Eu Ving January 2010 (has links)
Ductile plastic hinge zones in beams of reinforced concrete frames are known to incur extensive damage and elongate. This ‘beam elongation’ can inflict serious damage to adjacent floor diaphragms, raising concerns of life safety. In light of this, the slotted reinforced concrete beam was investigated as a promising non-tearing floor substitute for conventional design. It consists of a conventional reinforced concrete beam, modified with a narrow vertical slot adjacent to the column face, running approximately three-quarters of the beam depth. Seismic rotations occur about the remaining concrete “top-hinge”, such that deformations are concentrated in the bottom bars of the beam, away from the floor slab, and beam elongation is minimised.
The inclusion of the slot raised several design issues which needed to be addressed. These were the shear transfer across the top-hinge, buckling of bottom longitudinal reinforcement, low cycle fatigue, bond anchorage of reinforcement in interior joints, interior joint design, detailing with floor units and beam torsion resulting from eccentric floor gravity loads. These issues were conceptually investigated in this project. It was found that most issues could be resolved by providing additional reinforcement and/or specifying alternative detailing.
As part of the experimental investigation, quasi-static cyclic tests were performed on in-plane beam-column joint subassemblies. Specimens tested included exterior and interior joint subassemblies with slotted-beams and a conventional exterior joint as a benchmark. This was followed by a test on a slotted-beam interior joint subassembly with precast floor units and imposed gravity load. Experimental tests revealed significant reductions in damage to both the beam and floor when compared to conventional beams. Issues of bar buckling, bond-slip and altered joint behaviour were also highlighted, but were resolved in the final test.
A simple analytical procedure to predict the moment-rotation response of slotted-beams was developed and verified with experimental results. This was used to perform sensitivity studies to determine appropriate limits for the concrete top-hinge depth, top-to-bottom reinforcement ratio and depth of diagonal shear reinforcement.
For the numerical investigation, a multi-spring model was developed to represent the flexural response of slotted-beams. This was verified with experimental tests and implemented into a five-storey, three-bay frame for earthquake time history analyses. To provide a benchmark, a conventional frame was also setup using the plastic hinge element developed by Peng (2009). Time history analyses showed that the slotted-beam frame response was very similar to the response of a conventional frame. Due to greater hysteretic damping, there was a slight reduction in the average interstorey drift and lateral displacement envelopes. The slotted-beam frame also exhibited 40% smaller residual drifts than the conventional frame.
The research carried out in this thesis showed slotted reinforced concrete beams to be an effective non-tearing floor solution, which could provide a simple and practical substitute for conventional reinforced concrete design.
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