Abstract

ABSTRACTWhile fatigue crack growth in vacuum may occur by slip alone, environmental fatigue including crack growth in air is strongly influenced by crack‐tip surface chemistry that adversely affects ductility. Cumulative diffusion, combined with adsorption and chemisorption in the loading half‐cycle may promote instantaneous crack extension by brittle microfracture (BMF). Unlike slip, the BMF component will be sensitive to parameters that affect near‐tip stresses, such as load history and constraint. BMF dominates near‐threshold environmental fatigue. Being a surface phenomenon, it loses its significance with increasing growth rate, as slip‐driven crack extension gains momentum and growth becomes less sensitive to environment. The BMF model provides for the first time, a scientific rationale for the residual stress effect as well as the related connection between stress–strain hysteresis and load‐sequence sensitivity of metal fatigue including notch response. Experimental evidence obtained on a variety of materials under different loading conditions in air and vacuum appears to support the proposed model and its implications.

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