PSI - Issue 2_B
Pavel Pokorný et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 2 (2016) 3585–3592 Author name / Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2016) 000–000
3589
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Fig. 3. (a) Measured v - K data ( R ratios were considered: -1; -0.5; -1); (b) The dependence of threshold value K th on stress ratio R ; (c) The dependence of threshold value K th,max on stress ratio R .
2.2. Fatigue crack propagation rate description Very common approach NASGRO [NASGRO manual (2002)] was chosen for the interpolation of experimental data:
p
K
th
1
n
1 1
dN da
N a
R f
K
,
(6)
C
K
q
1
K
max
K
c
where C , n are material constants and p , q empirical constants describing the curvatures that occur near the threshold and near the instability region of the crack growth curve, respectively and f is crack opening function. The residual fatigue lifetime is dominantly given by propagation rate of relatively small crack in the studied case, see Fig. 2b, therefore the denominator (1-K max /K c ) q (corresponding to rapid propagation of longer cracks) can be neglected. Then the NASGRO can be expressed in the form: p th n K K K R f C N a dN da 1 1 1 . (7)
Note that Eq. (7) was used for fit of material data in Fig. 3a. The stress intensity factor range is function of the crack length a, therefore: ( ) ( ) 2 ( ) ( ) , ,min ,max K a K a K a kK a I B I I .
(8)
The effective stress intensity factor range considers different crack closure under different R ratios: K R f K eff 1 1 .
(9)
The opening function f is defined by Newman empirical description: f A A R 0 1 ,
-2 R<0
(10)
2
3
, max(
)
f
3 2 0 1 R A A R A R A R
,
R 0
(11)
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