Publication | Closed Access
A computational lifetime prediction of a thermal shock experiment. Part II: discussion on difference fatigue criteria
29
Citations
19
References
2006
Year
Fem ComputationsEngineeringLife PredictionMechanical EngineeringStructural MechanicsFatigue CriteriaStructural EngineeringHigh-rate LoadingReliability EngineeringMechanicsNumerical SimulationSplash ExperimentExperimental MechanicThermodynamicsService Life PredictionMechanical BehaviorThermal Shock ExperimentStructural Health MonitoringComputational Lifetime PredictionReliability PredictionLoad-bearing CapacityLow-cycle FatiguePhysic Of FailureDifference Fatigue CriteriaThermal EngineeringMechanics Of Materials
ABSTRACT The SPLASH experiment has been designed in 1985 by the CEA to simulate thermal fatigue due to cooling shocks on steel specimens and is similar to the device reported by Marsh in Ref. [ 1 ]. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the application of different fatigue criteria in this case. The fatigue criteria: dissipated energy, Manson Coffin, Park and Nelson, dissipated energy with a pressure term, are determined for the experiment using results from FEM computations presented in the first part of the paper (Part I) 2 and compared with results from uniaxial and multiaxial experiments from literature. The work emphasizes the evolution of the triaxiality ratio during the loading cycle.
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