Abstract

ABSTRACTTo investigate the effect of bulk damage on fatigue crack initiation, crack initiations due to low‐cycle fatigue of Type 316 stainless steel were observed by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and scanning electron microscopy. The EBSD observations showed that local misorientation developed inhomogeneously due to the cyclic strain, and many cracks were initiated from the slip steps and grain boundaries where the local misorientation was relatively large. The crack initiations could be categorized into two types: enhancement of the driving force by geometrical discontinuity (slip steps and notches), and reduction of material resistance against crack initiation caused by accumulated bulk damage at grain boundaries. In particular, more than half of the cracks were initiated from grain boundaries. However, in spite of the significant bulk damage, the fatigue life was extended by removing the surface cracks under strain of 1 and 2% amplitude. The stress state at the microstructural level was changed by the surface removal, and the damaged portion did not suffer further damage. It was concluded that although bulk damage surely exists, the fatigue life can be restored to that of the untested specimen by removing the surface cracks.

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