Effect of fatigue loading mode on 718 alloy fatigue properties

3Citations
Citations of this article
22Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

In materials science, fatigue is the progressive and localized structural damage that occurs when a material is subjected to cyclic loading. If the loads are above a certain threshold, microscopic cracks will begin to form at the stress concentrators such as the surface, persistent slip bands (PSBs), interfaces of constituents in the case of composites, and grain interfaces in the case of metals. Eventually a crack will reach a critical size, the crack will propagate suddenly, and the structure will fracture. The first works about fatigue phenomenon were published since 1837 and intensively was investigated by Wöhler in 1860. With needs of using the progressive materials such titanium and Ni-base superalloys become more significant to put under the various fatigue loading these sorts of alloys. Presented article deals with how the various condition of loading influenced an IN718 alloy fatigue lifetime especially. The fatigue tests provided on this kind of material was done via low frequency loading and push-pull or rotation-bending stress up to this time. Fatigue tests of experimental material was carried out at two different frequencies, 20 kHz with stress ration R = - 1 (push – pull, σm = 0 MPa) as well as the three-point bending load R < 1 (σom = 526.8 MPa) at low frequency 150 Hz at room temperature. The microstructure characterization and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) fractography analysis of fatigue process were done as well. The main goal of study was analyze obtained data after fatigue test and consider, if the various loading modes have influence on fatigue lifetime (initiation sites, crack propagation character, etc.).

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Belan, J., Kuchariková, L., Tillová, E., Závodská, D., & Chalupová, M. (2019). Effect of fatigue loading mode on 718 alloy fatigue properties. Periodica Polytechnica Transportation Engineering, 47(4), 335–341. https://doi.org/10.3311/PPtr.12114

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free