Abstract

Cyclic deformation and fracture behavior of the 321 stainless steel are investigated at 633 K under engineering-stress and strain controlled low cycle fatigue (LCF) cycling, and the fatigue life data are compared with ASME section-III Division-1 S-N curve. In stress-controlled LCF tests, ratcheting-strain accumulation is observed even under zero mean-stress, and the direction of ratcheting is found to strongly depend on initial-ramp direction of first-cycle. In addition, plastic-strain range and striation width are observed to be higher than those in strain-controlled tests. The stress-life curve obtained from stress-controlled tests is 2–3 orders of magnitude lower in comparison to stress-life curve derived from strain-controlled LCF tests as per the ASME procedure. The discrepancy is attributed to the differences in deformation and damage development in stress and strain-controlled cycling.

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