Over the last three decades, a variety of models have been developed in order to predict the life of components under fatigue. Some of the models are based on the definition of the fatigue process as a combination of the phases of crack initiation and crack propagation, considering component life as the sum of the duration of each phase. Other models consider only one of the phases; some consider only initiation while others only propagation, though in this case, from cracks with lengths in the order of the microstructural dimensions. This article will carry out a comparative analysis of the methods that consider life as the sum of the duration of both phases. In this same line, it proposes yet another method, which simulates crack growth according to damage theories. In analysing the behaviour of each model, this paper will describe various elements: the prediction that each of them produces regarding notched specimens submitted to testing, the advantages and inconveniences of each, and lastly, the possibilities of applying each of the models to more realistic geometries. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Vázquez, J., Navarro, C., & Dominguez, J. (2010). On the estimation of fatigue life in notches differentiating the phases of crack initiation and propagation. Fatigue and Fracture of Engineering Materials and Structures, 33(1), 22–36. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-2695.2009.01411.x
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