Abstract

A study was conducted to assess the viability of using ultrasonic shear wave non-destructive inspection (NDI) methods to detect fatigue cracks nucleating in the vicinity of a contact regionin situ. Use of this method is hampered by the presence of electronic and acoustic noise in the laboratory environment and by the contact in the experimental configuration. A previously established fretting fatigue test fixture was selected, in which nominally flat pads are held in contact against a thin, flat specimen and gross sliding between the pad and specimen is eliminated. Experiments were performed with Ti-6Al-4V at 300 Hz andR=0.5 for average clamping stresses of 200 and 620 MPa, and applied fatigue stresses of 330 and 250 MPa. The shear wave response was monitored during each test, and the test was interrupted when changes in the waveform were thought to indicate a crack. Also, the effect of the contact load and the sensitivity of the technique under the contact conditions were assessed. For the lower clamping stress, a sizeable portion of life was spent nucleating cracks, and the propagation life was too short to allow interruption of the tests. At the higher clamping stress, cracks with surface lengths of ∼2.5 mm were detected on, 10 mm wide specimens in tests conducted using the shear wave NDI technique. While the presence of the contact produced changes in the ultrasonic waveform, additional changes occurred as the crack propagated that permitted crack detection. A simple waveform correlation was used post-test to quantify the waveform changes, and thereby validate the viability of this NDI method for use in contact regions. In the configuration used for this study, the shear wave NDI technique was insensitive to small cracks. Some refinements that could dramatically improve crack detection capability are discussed.

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