Abstract
This study investigates the impacts of strain ratio and pre-strain on the low-cycle fatigue properties and microscopic damage mechanisms of 4130X steel across varying strain amplitudes. Under symmetric loading, initial cycles at low strain amplitudes demonstrate clear peak/valley stress hardening followed by cyclic softening in later stages of fatigue. In contrast, the hardening behavior vanishes at higher strain amplitudes. Increasing strain ratio and pre-strain cause the initial hardening behavior at low strain amplitudes to gradually disappear. Additionally, at lower strain amplitudes, fatigue life decreases as strain ratio and pre-strain rise, attributed to substantial tensile mean stress. Microscopic examination reveals that symmetric cyclic loading at low strain amplitudes releases stress concentrations caused by quenched and tempered processing and reduces both dislocation density and localized plastic strain. Conversely, at higher strain ratios and pre-strains, increased tensile mean stresses not only intensify dislocation multiplication, resulting in high dislocation density, but also activate multi-slip system, leading to dislocation cross-slip. Moreover, at a high strain amplitude of 0.45 %, pre-strain aids in martensite recovery and promotes dislocation annihilation during recovery, thus inducing cyclic softening. Finally, the fatigue lives under varied loading conditions are compared with the fatigue design curve prescribed by ASME VIII-II code.
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