Abstract

This study investigated the method of estimating the fatigue strength of small notched Ti–6Al–4V specimen using the theory of critical distance that employs the stress distribution in the vicinity of the notch root. Circumferential-notched round-bar fatigue tests were conducted to quantify the effects of notch radius and notch depth on fatigue strength. The fatigue tests show that the larger notch radius increases the fatigue strength and the greater notch depth decreases the fatigue strength. The theory of critical distance assumes that fatigue damage can be correctly estimated only if the entire stress field damaging the fatigue fracture process zone is taken into account. Critical distance stress is defined as the average stress within the critical distance from notch root. The region from the notch root to the critical distance corresponds to the fatigue fracture process zone for crack initiation. It has been found that a good correlation exists between the critical distance stress and crack initiation life of small notched specimens if the critical distance is calibrated by the two notched fatigue failure curves of different notch root radii. The calibrated critical distances did not vary clearly over a wide range of fatigue failure cycles from medium-cycle low-cycle fatigue regime to high-cycle fatigue regime and have an almost constant value. This critical distance corresponds to the size of crystallographic facet at the fatigue crack initiation site for the wide range of fatigue cycles.

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