Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
800344 Mechanics of Materials 2014 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Thermal fatigue of a X38CrMoV5 steel is investigated under various test conditions.•A microscopic crack network forms on the surface of the tubular specimen.•The cracking morphology changes from a cell- to a parallel-type along the specimen.•A local stress amplitude ratio Δσzz/Δσθθ near 1 leads to multi-axial heat-checking.•Uniaxial cracking results when Δσzz/Δσθθ is close to or below 0.6.

Thermal fatigue experiments are performed on a high temperature tool steel X38CrMoV5 (AISI H11), under various maximum temperatures and heating rates. A microscopic interconnected crack pattern (named “heat-checking”) forms on the oxidised surface of the laboratory tubular specimen. A gradual transition is observed, from a “cell-type” cracking at the centre of the specimen to a “parallel cracking” at its extremities. This variation of the morphology is well demonstrated by geometrical and topological characteristics of the crack network (micro-crack orientations, cell shape and node density), which change along the longitudinal axis of the specimen. The thermo-elasto-plastic loading of the specimen is estimated by Finite Element Calculations using ABAQUS™. Whatever the thermal fatigue conditions, a linear correlation can be established between the longitudinal and hoop stress amplitude ratio Δσzz/Δσθθ and the hoop and longitudinal inter-crack spacing ratio dθθ/dzz. It is shown that a stress amplitude ratio close to 1 results in a multi-axial heat-checking, while a uni-axial cracking is generated when Δσzz/Δσθθ is close to or below 0.6. This means that the morphology of the heat-checking pattern (cell or parallel type) can be used as an indicator for the local stress ratio of the thermal fatigue specimen or industrial real tools.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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