Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
770744 | Engineering Fracture Mechanics | 2011 | 18 Pages |
This work assesses the ability of linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) with superposition to correlate the growth of one-dimensional fatigue cracks at cold-expanded open holes under constant amplitude loading. Care is taken in the work to accurately: control the test setup to ensure one-dimensional crack growth, determine residual stress in the coupons, measure crack growth, determine the fatigue crack growth rate (FCGR), compute stress intensity factors, and correlate fatigue crack growth rate with stress intensity factor range ΔK and stress ratio R. The work used long dog-bone coupons having a gage section 38.1 mm wide and a centrally located 7.09 mm diameter hole. The coupons were fabricated from 2.03 mm thick 7075-T6 sheet. The small coupon thickness and alignment of the loading fixture to eliminate bending resulted in one-dimensional crack growth. Residual stress due to cold expansion (CX) was measured using the contour method, as a function of position on the crack plane. Residual stress measurements gave typical results for the average residual stress field, with near-yield compression at the hole giving way to tension further out. Measurements on multiple coupons showed ±10% variability in residual stress. Crack growth behavior of multiple as-machined (AM) coupons (without CX) tested at R of 0.1 or 0.5 agreed with earlier results published in the literature. The scatter in lifetime, defined as the range of lifetime divided by the average lifetime, was less than 30% in the AM coupons. Crack growth behavior of multiple CX coupons tested at the same two applied stress ratios was consistent with predictions by linear superposition, where the predictions used a correlation for fatigue crack growth rate as a function of ΔK and R based on crack closure concepts and a piecewise log–log fit to FCGR versus ΔKeff data from tests of non-residual stress bearing material and from the literature. Scatter in lifetime of CX coupons was 152% at R = 0.1 and 69% at R = 0.5. While the scatter in CX coupon lifetime is considerably greater than for AM coupons, it is found consistent with the observed 10% variability in residual stress. The work therefore demonstrates the ability of LEFM with superposition to accurately correlate the behavior of coupons with and without residual stresses.