Abstract

Constant amplitude fatigue of a material at a fixed stress ratio, R, and at some limiting stress level, may produce high cycle fatigue (HCF) lives in excess of some large number, typically 10 7 or higher, which can be treated as an endurance limit. Under vibratory loading, stress transients can exceed this endurance limit amplitude and cause damage that accumulates with repeated transient loading. These HCF transients normally occur at lower stress amplitudes than those needed to cause low cycle fatigue (LCF) where lives, N, are typically in the range N < 10 4–10 5. Therefore, the HCF transient stresses produce cycles to failure beyond the normal LCF regime but correspond to amplitudes that are above the fatigue limit stress. In this investigation, a titanium alloy, Ti-6Al-4V, is subjected to HCF stress transients while being cycled under constant amplitude HCF. The HCF transients correspond to blocks of loading above the fatigue limit stress applied for a specified fraction of their expected life. A step-loading procedure is used to determine the fatigue limit stress at a frequency of 420 Hz. Stress transients applied at stresses up to 40% above the endurance limit for cycle counts up to 25% of expected life are found to have little or no effect on the fatigue limit stress. Simple calculations of the propagation life in a test specimen show that most of the life at these transient stress levels is spent in the nucleation phase. Fractography, aided by heat tinting, was unable to detect any prior cracks due to the HCF stress transients on the fractured specimens.

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