Abstract

AbstractIn this study, a new concept of the elastic constant ratio was introduced to derive an S‐N base function, which has removed the requirement of the shear modulus to be measured in previous work, allowing much wider applications in fatigue prediction with significant reduction in the costs involved in conducting experiments and acceleration of the design process in industries. In this approach, the damage parameter was the effective tensile stress verified for both positive and negative R ratios (the ratio between the minimum stress and the maximum stress). Existing work only provided a general description of the criterion without detailed explicit equations, which does not provide sufficient clarity to the reader and could lead to variable fatigue life predictions. Here, detailed equations are introduced on the calculation procedure to allow accurate results to be obtained for fatigue assessment. The applicability of the approach was validated using two industrial components, that is, the Metacone spring and the bush spring. The maximum values of the damage parameter corresponded to the same failure locations observed in the experiments. The suggested S‐N base function, correlated with different materials and failure cycles, could be applied in a fatigue design stage and failure analysis for rubber isolators.Highlights For the first time, an elastic constant ratio is introduced on different rubbers. There is no additional test required for the material constants to save cost. The approach is experimentally validated on two industrial isolators. Monitoring stiffness in tests cannot determine the crack initiation accurately.

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