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| Content Provider | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Digital Collection |
|---|---|
| Author | James, C. Newman Justin, W. Shaw Balkrishna, S. Annigeri Brett, M. Ziegler |
| Copyright Year | 2012 |
| Abstract | The 7050 aluminum alloy is used in many aerospace structural applications. Previous studies have identified that fatigue cracks develop very rough crack-surface profiles, which cause very high crack-closure levels due to a combination of plasticity, roughness and debris. Previously, tests were conducted on compact, C(T), specimens to generate crack-growth data from threshold to near fracture over a wide range in stress ratios (R). New threshold testing methods, based on compression precracking, were used to generate the data in the near-threshold regime. The plasticity-induced crack-closure model, FASTRAN, was used to correlate the data over a wide range in stress ratios and crack-growth rates from threshold to near fracture. To account for the very high crack-closure levels, a very low constraint factor, like plane-stress conditions, had to be used in the model. In addition, the crack-opening loads were measured during these tests using a local strain-gage method to generate another ΔKeff-rate curve. These two curves differed only in the near-threshold regime. Herein, fatigue-crack-growth tests were conducted on C(T) specimens under spike overloads and simulated aircraft spectrum loading. Also, fatigue tests were conducted on single-edge-notch bend, SEN(B), specimens over a wide range in loading conditions (constant amplitude and three aircraft spectra). All specimens were machined from a single forged block of 7050-T7451. However, no residual stresses were measured in both the SEN(B) and C(T) specimens. Two European standard spectra were used, but modified to have only tension-tension loading. The purpose of this paper was to evaluate the two different effective stress-intensity factor curves for making crack-growth and fatigue-life predictions. Small-crack theory was used to make fatigue-life predictions using inclusion-particle sizes from the literature. Fatigue predictions on the SEN(B) specimens agreed fairly well (± 30%) using a 12-micrometer semi-circular initial flaw located at the semicircular-edge notch under all loading conditions, except the model was unconservative (factor of 3) on one of the severe aircraft spectra (Mini-TWIST+, Level 1). For the C(T) specimens subjected to single-spike overloads, the life-prediction code produced much more retardation than observed in the tests. However, the predicted crack-length-against-cycles under the Mini-Falstaff+ spectrum were only about 15% longer than the tests. The discrepancy under the single-spike overloads and the severe aircraft spectra was suspected to be caused by the low constraint factor and/or crack paths meandering around overload plastic zones. Ideally, a roughness-induced crack-closure model, in addition to the plasticity model, would be needed to obtain more reasonable results. |
| Sponsorship | International Gas Turbine Institute |
| Starting Page | 131 |
| Ending Page | 141 |
| Page Count | 11 |
| File Format | |
| ISBN | 9780791844731 |
| DOI | 10.1115/GT2012-68502 |
| Volume Number | Volume 7: Structures and Dynamics, Parts A and B |
| Conference Proceedings | ASME Turbo Expo 2012: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2012-06-11 |
| Publisher Place | Copenhagen, Denmark |
| Access Restriction | Subscribed |
| Subject Keyword | Cracks Plasticity Roughness Fatigue Spectrum loading Fatigue-crack growth Debris Crack closure Aluminum alloy Aluminum alloys Surface roughness Fracture (materials) Fatigue cracks |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
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