Abstract

The process of prevention of failure from structural fatigue is a process that should take place during the early development and design phases of a structure. In the ground vehicle industry, for example, the durability specifications of a new product are directly interweaved with the desired performance characteristics, materials selection, manufacturing methods, and safety characteristics of the vehicle. In the field of fatigue and durability analysis of materials, three main techniques have emerged: nominal stress-based analysis, local strain-based analysis, and fracture mechanics analysis. Each of these methods has their own strengths and domain of applicability—for example, if an initial crack or flaw size is known to exist in a structure, a fracture mechanics approach can give a meaningful estimate of the number of cycles it takes to propagate the initial flaw to failure. The development of the local strain-based fatigue analysis approach has been used to great success in the automotive industry, particularly for the analysis of measured strain time histories gathered during proving ground testing or customer usage. However, the strain life approach is dependent on specific material properties data and the ability to measure (or calculate) a local strain history. Historically, the stress-based fatigue analysis approach was developed first—and is sometimes considered an “old” approach—but the stress-based fatigue analysis methods have been continued to be developed. The major strengths of this approach include the ability to give both quantitative and qualitative estimates of fatigue life with minimal estimates on stress levels and material properties, thus making the stress-based approach very relevant in the early design phase of structures where uncertainties regarding material selection, manufacturing processes, and final design specifications may cause numerous design iterations. This article explains the FKM-Guideline approach to stress-based uniaxial fatigue analysis. The Forschungskuratorium Maschinenbau (FKM) was developed in 1994 in Germany and has since continued to be updated. The guideline was developed for the use of the mechanical engineering community involved in the design of machine components, welded joints, and related areas. It is our desire to make the failure prevention and design community aware of these guidelines through a thorough explanation of the method and the application of the method to detailed examples.

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