Abstract

Abstract—Within the past decade, critical plane approaches have gained increasing support based on correlation of experimentally observed fatigue lives and microcrack orientations under predominately low cycle fatigue (LCF) conditions for various stress states. In this paper, we further develop an engineering model for microcrack propagation consistent with critical plane concepts for correlation of both LCF and high cycle fatigue (HCF) behavior, including multiple regimes of small crack growth. The critical plane microcrack propagation approach of McDowell and Berard serves as a starting point to incorporate multiple regimes of crack nucleation, shear growth under the influence of microstructural barriers, and transition to linear crack length‐dependent growth related to elastic‐plastic fracture mechanics (EPFM) concepts. Microcrack iso‐length data from uniaxial and torsional fatigue tests of 1045 steel and IN 718 are examined and correlated by introducing a transition crack length which governs the shift from nonlinear to linear crack length dependence of da/dN. This transition is related to the shift from strong microstructural influence to weak influence on the propagation of microcracks. Simple forms are introduced for both the transition crack length and the crack length‐dependence of crack growth rate within the microcrack propagation framework (introduced previously by McDowell and Berard) and are employed to fit the 1045 steel and IN 718 microcrack iso‐length data, assuming preexisting sub‐grain size cracks. The nonlinear evolution of crack length with normalized cycles is then predicted over a range of stress amplitudes in uniaxial and torsional fatigue. The microcrack growth law is shown to have potential to correlate microcrack propagation behavior as well as damage accumulation for HCF‐LCF loading sequences and sequences of applied stress states.

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