Abstract
The fatigue experiments for titanium alloy Ti60 under different uniaxial/multiaxial thermo-mechanical loading modes found that the combined action of high temperature and tensile stress can cause the debonding of the second phase strengthening particles between grain boundary, reducing the ability to resist deformation of Ti60, which leads to a decrease in the fatigue life of the material. In addition, mean tensile stress increases the ability of cracks to break through intergranular barriers and the non-proportional additional hardening caused by multiaxial loading exacerbates the formation of microcracks. Both will increase the fatigue damage of the material. The fatigue damage mechanism identified in this investigation can reasonably explain the fatigue life law under multiaxial loading at high temperature, uniaxial and multiaxial thermo-mechanical fatigue loadings.
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