Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
775769 International Journal of Fatigue 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fatigue critical helicopter components are, in general, subjected to complex high frequency dynamic loading. Due to these high frequencies small flaws can propagate to failure in a short period of time. Consequently, the demonstration of damage tolerance for those components must include the analysis of near-threshold crack propagation, i.e. growth in the low-to-mid stress intensity factor range (ΔK) regime. To this end this paper presents a fatigue crack growth analysis of a helicopter airframe component, that was used as part of a round-robin study into helicopter fatigue, performed using a non-similitude based crack growth law, termed the Generalised Frost–Dugdale law. The resultant computed crack growth history is in excellent agreement with the measured crack length histories.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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