Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
778241 International Journal of Fatigue 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Destructive 3D analysis is compared with non-destructive X-ray Computed micro-tomography.•Serial Block Face Scanning Electron Microscopy of a fatigue crack in magnesium has been done.•Three-dimensional fractography reveals the microstructure influence on crack propagation.•Digital volume correlation measures the crack opening displacements and opening modes in 3D.•Twinning deflects the crack path and retards the crack propagation rate.

A previous four-dimensional in situ study of a short crack in a magnesium alloy King et al. (2011), Elektron 21, used synchrotron X-ray computed micro-tomography to follow its three-dimensional development with progressive fatigue cycling through the microstructure, which had been mapped by diffraction contrast tomography to measure grain shapes and crystal orientations in three dimensions. In the present work, very high-resolution post-test examination of the same sample by Serial Block Face Scanning Electron Microscopy (SBFSEM) provided three-dimensional fractographs to investigate the influence of microstructural features on the measured crack propagation rates. Digital volume correlation, applied to the X-ray computed micro-tomography datasets, measured the three-dimensional crack opening displacements and hence the crack opening modes. The short fatigue crack in magnesium propagated with mixed mode opening. Basal plane fracture is a dominant mechanism; hence, boundaries that disrupt the continuity of the basal plane are proposed to influence the crack propagation rate.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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