Abstract

Herein, a short crack propagation in a martensitic spring steel by means of in situ fatigue tests in a confocal laser microscope and additional electron back‐scattered diffraction analyses to link the local crystallographic orientation of the hierarchical martensitic microstructure with the short crack propagation behavior are investigated. For this purpose, different stress levels are imposed at a constant R ratio of −1 and a frequency of 10 Hz applying a sinusoidal command signal. It is found that the early fatigue damage evolution is characterized by the formation of slip bands, which subsequently serve as crack initiation sites. Most of the slip bands and correspondingly most of the short fatigue cracks initiate at or close to prior austenite grain boundaries. A strong dependence of the crack density, used as a parameter for fatigue damage, on the applied stress amplitude could be observed. The prior austenite grain boundaries can be identified to act as obstacles to short crack propagation because of the corresponding strong change in the crystallographic orientation, leading to an oscillating short crack propagation rate.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call