Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
768254 | Engineering Fracture Mechanics | 2006 | 11 Pages |
Crack-tip blunting under tensile loads and re-sharpening of the crack-tip during unloading is one of the basic mechanisms for fatigue crack growth in ductile metals. Here, based on an elastic-perfectly plastic material model, crack growth computations are continued up to 700 full cycles by using re-meshing at several stages of the plastic deformation. A compressive underload in one of the cycles tends to increase the rate of cyclic crack growth, and this effect is studied in detail for a single underload, based on the blunting re-sharpening mechanism. Subsequently, the increased rate of crack growth due to periodically occurring underloads is analysed. A single overload has the opposite effect of giving a significant delay in the subsequent fatigue crack growth. An analysis is carried out to compare the effect of a small overload to that of a larger overload.