Abstract

The ratchetting behavior of advanced 9–12% chromium ferrite steel was investigated by cyclic loading tests with various hold times and stress ratios at elevated temperature of 873 K. Particular attention was paid to the effect of hold time on the whole-life ratchetting deformation and failure mechanism. Results indicate that the total ratchetting strains under creep-fatigue loading can be decomposed into two parts, i.e., cyclic accumulated creep strain produced during the peak stress hold time ( ε R 1 ) , cyclic accumulated inelastic strain produced during the stress change process ( ε R 2 ). A transition in ratchetting components and rupture behavior with the increase of hold time was observed. In the long hold time domain, a quick shakedown of ratchetting strain ε R 2 occurs after the very first few cycles and the rupture behavior is fully controlled by the time-dependent creep damage. In the short hold time domain, ratchetting strain ε R 2 increases till the specimens fails and a mixed damage mode is responsible for the failure. An attempt is made to explain the existence of these two domains in terms of the evolutions of three internal stress components (back stress, isotropic stress and viscous stress) measured at the end of the holding period.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call