Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
807018 Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Optimization was performed using a derivate-free direct search multi-objective procedure.•Optimization was made considering the Renard Series for the material sheet arms thickness.•Maximum stress on the specimen center and maximum stress uniformity on a 1 mm radius was obtained.•A relationship between the optimal design variables and the material arms thickness was obtain.

In order to correctly assess the biaxial fatigue material properties one must experimentally test different load conditions and stress levels. With the rise of new in-plane biaxial fatigue testing machines, using smaller and more efficient electrical motors, instead of the conventional hydraulic machines, it is necessary to reduce the specimen size and to ensure that the specimen geometry is appropriate for the load capacity installed. At the present time there are no standard specimen’s geometries and the indications on literature how to design an efficient test specimen are insufficient. The main goal of this paper is to present the methodology on how to obtain an optimal cruciform specimen geometry, with thickness reduction in the gauge area, appropriate for fatigue crack initiation, as a function of the base material sheet thickness used to build the specimen. The geometry is optimized for maximum stress using several parameters, ensuring that in the gauge area the stress distributions on the loading directions are uniform and maximum with two limit phase shift loading conditions (δ = 0° and δ = 180°). Therefore the fatigue damage will always initiate on the center of the specimen, avoiding failure outside this region. Using the Renard Series of preferred numbers for the base material sheet thickness as a reference, the reaming geometry parameters are optimized using a derivative-free methodology, called direct multi search (DMS) method. The final optimal geometry as a function of the base material sheet thickness is proposed, as a guide line for cruciform specimens design, and as a possible contribution for a future standard on in-plane biaxial fatigue tests.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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