Abstract
The fretting fatigue behavior of two high strength structural steels, PH 13-8 Mo stainless steel and quenched and tempered 4340 steel, is investigated. Both were heat treated to a similar hardness (43-44 HRC), comparable to the condition used in structural components. Both materials experienced significant reductions in fatigue strength due to fretting, with PH 13-8 Mo stainless steel exhibiting a greater susceptibility to fretting than 4340 steel, when operating in the mixed fretting regime. The use of fretting pads with different surface profiles showed that contact geometry did not significantly influence the fretting fatigue behavior of either steel for the range of loading conditions considered. The fretting fatigue lives are discussed in light of the low cycle fatigue and crack growth rate behavior of these steels. The life trends in fretting fatigue correlate more closely to the low cycle fatigue behavior.
Published Version
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