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Short-Crack Growth Behaviour in an Aluminum Alloy: An AGARD Cooperative Test Programme
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1988
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EngineeringMechanical EngineeringAluminum AlloyFatigueDynamic Crack PropagationStressstrain AnalysisMicrostructure-strength RelationshipMaterials ScienceShort-crack Growth BehaviourMechanical BehaviorSolid MechanicsShort Fatigue CracksLow-cycle FatigueMicrostructureNotch SurfaceCrack FormationStructural MechanicsDamage EvolutionGaussian Load SequencesMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
An AGARD Cooperative Test Program on the growth of short fatigue cracks was conducted to define the significance of the short-crack effect, to compare test results from various laboratories, and to evaluate an existing analytical crack-growth prediction model. The initiation and growth of short fatigue cracks (5 micrometer to 2 mm) from the surface of a semi-circular notch in 2024-T3 aluminum alloy sheet material were monitored under various load histories. The cracks initiated from inclusion particle clusters or voids on the notch surface and generally grew as surface cracks. Tests were conducted under several constant-amplitude (stress ratios of -2, -1, 0, and 0.5) and spectrum (FALSTAFF and Gaussian) loading conditions at 3 stress levels each. Short crack growth was recorded using a plastic-replica technique. Over 250 edge-notched specimens were fatigue tested and nearly 950 cracks monitored by 12 participants from 9 countries. Long crack-growth rate data for cracks greater than 2 mm in length were obtained over a wide range in rates (10 to the -8 to 10 to the -1 mm/cycle) for all constant-amplitude loading conditions. Long crack-growth rate data for the FALSTAFF and Gaussian load sequences were also obtained.