Publication | Open Access
Assessment of the fatigue crack closure phenomenon in damage-tolerant aluminium alloy by<i>in-situ</i>high-resolution synchrotron X-ray microtomography
111
Citations
16
References
2003
Year
EngineeringFracture DiagnosticsDamage-tolerant Aluminium AlloyMechanical EngineeringSynchrotron X-ray MicrotomographyFracture ModelingStructural MaterialsX-ray ImagingStressstrain AnalysisMicrostructure-strength RelationshipRadiation ImagingHealth SciencesMaterials ScienceMicrostructural FeaturesStrain LocalizationSolid MechanicsMaterial MechanicsLow-cycle FatigueMicrostructureApplied PhysicsPhysical DisplacementsCrack FormationMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
Synchrotron X-ray microtomography has been utilized for the in-situ observation of steady-state plane-strain fatigue crack growth. A high-resolution experimental configuration and phase contrast imaging technique have enabled the reconstruction of crack images with an isotropic voxel with a 0.7 µm edge. The details of a crack are readily observed, together with evidence of the incidence and mechanical influence of closure. After preliminary investigations of the achievable accuracy and reproducibility, a variety of measurement methods are used to quantify crack-opening displacement (COD) and closure from the tomography data. Utilization of the physical displacements of microstructural features is proposed to obtain detailed COD data, and its feasibility is confirmed. Loss of fracture surface contact occurs gradually up to the maximum load. This is significantly different from tendencies reported where a single definable opening level is essentially assumed to exist. The closure behaviour is found to be attributable mainly to pronounced generation of mode III displacement which may be caused by local crack topology. Many small points of closure still remain near the crack tip, suggesting that the near-tip contact induces crack growth resistance. The effects of overloading are also discussed.
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