Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
781053 International Journal of Fatigue 2012 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

High fidelity measurements of constituent particle or corrosion topography nucleated fatigue crack growth rates (da/dN) are established for 7075-T651 in humid air. Values of microstructure-scale da/dN are determined by microscopy of programmed load-induced crack surface markers, rather than surface-only measurements. Both pristine and corroded specimen da/dN from various applied stress levels are successfully correlated using continuum-elastic stress intensity (ΔK or ΔK and Kmax) or dislocation-based (Bilby–Cottrell–Swindon) crack tip opening displacement (cyclic ϕ and ϕmax), with the former accounting for the gradient of elastic stress concentration due to the initiating feature. Values of da/dN vary by an order of magnitude at each fixed driving force due to microstructural influences that result in a locally irregular crack front. Grain-scale models using stress intensity closure or slip-based crystal plasticity do not capture experimental da/dN variability. Due to an inadequate mechanistic basis, mechanics-inspired models of da/dN do not predict multiple growth regimes that are typical of environment enhanced cracking. An elastic ΔK-based description of long crack da/dN data for a given alloy-environment can be transformed to a continuum elastic–plastic ϕc basis to provide a mean crack growth rate description. Coupling mean rates with a statistical description of microstructure sensitive variability, and dislocation or crystal plasticity-finite element modeling of component ϕc for non-continuum cracking, will enhance prognosis in the MSC regime.

► High fidelity small crack da/dN are established for 7075 via fracture surface SEM. ► K- and ϕ-based approaches capture mean da/dN trends for corroded and pristine data. ► Extrapolation of long crack data reasonably captures mean small crack behavior. ► High variability in da/dN is attributed to local microstructure interactions. ► Variability about da/dN trends is not captured by current mechanism based models.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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