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A MICRO‐MECHANICS MODEL OF CORROSION‐FATIGUE CRACK GROWTH IN STEELS

11

Citations

16

References

1996

Year

Abstract

Abstract Principles of Microstructural Fracture Mechanics (MFM) are used to develop a model for the characterization of environment‐assisted short fatigue crack growth. Fatigue cracks are invariably initiated at corrosion pits formed at inclusions, hence the analysis includes stress concentration effects at pits that lead to the propagation of fatigue cracks the rates of which are considered to be proportional to the crack tip plastic displacement. This plasticity is constrained by microstructural barriers which are overcome in a non‐aggressive environment at critical crack lengths only when the applied stress is higher than the fatigue limit. However, the superposition of an aggressive environment assists fatigue damage via crack tip dissolution, enhancement of crack tip plastic deformation, the introduction of stress concentrations at pits and a reduction of the strength of the microstructural barrier. These environment effects are manifested in a drastic reduction of the fatigue limit and higher crack propagation rates. The model is compared with fatigue crack propagation data of a BS251A58 steel tested in reversed torsion when submerged in a 0.6M NaCl solution.

References

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