Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations

Heat-treated and shot-peened lightweight steels with demanding requirements for durability are applied in high-performance automotive leaf springs. Due to their heat-treatment they exhibit degraded properties in the surface-near area compared to the core. This area, which may extend until 300 μm fro...

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Main Authors: Maria Pappa, Georgios Savaidis, Nikolaos Michailidis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/14/17/4795
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spelling doaj-c1717bafa7674acb990a9f597263ed912021-09-09T13:50:36ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442021-08-01144795479510.3390/ma14174795Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-IndentationsMaria Pappa0Georgios Savaidis1Nikolaos Michailidis2Physical Metallurgy Laboratory, School of Mechanical Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, GreeceLaboratory of Machine Elements and Machine Design, School of Mechanical Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, GreecePhysical Metallurgy Laboratory, School of Mechanical Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, GreeceHeat-treated and shot-peened lightweight steels with demanding requirements for durability are applied in high-performance automotive leaf springs. Due to their heat-treatment they exhibit degraded properties in the surface-near area compared to the core. This area, which may extend until 300 μm from the surface to the core, experiences the highest bending stresses at operation. The microstructure in the surface and sub-surface layers determines the mechanical performance as well as the wear resistance. The present study refers to the material properties of a stress shot-peened 51CrV4 steel at various depths from the surface. The effect of the manufacturing process has been captured both by Vickers micro-hardness measurements and nanoindentation. The latter combined with a Fine Element Method (FEM)-based algorithm enables the determination of variations in the material’s stress–strain curves over the affected layers, which translate to internal stress changes. The nanoindentation technique has been applied here successfully for the first time ever on leaf springs. The combination of microstructural analysis, microhardness and nanoindentation captures the changes of the treated material, offering insights on the material characteristics, and yielding accurate elastoplastic material properties for local, layered-based analysis of the components’ mechanical performance at operational loading scenarios, i.e., in the framework of stress shot-peening simulation models.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/14/17/4795nanoindentationmicrostructural analysismechanical propertiesshot peening
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Pappa
Georgios Savaidis
Nikolaos Michailidis
spellingShingle Maria Pappa
Georgios Savaidis
Nikolaos Michailidis
Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
Materials
nanoindentation
microstructural analysis
mechanical properties
shot peening
author_facet Maria Pappa
Georgios Savaidis
Nikolaos Michailidis
author_sort Maria Pappa
title Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
title_short Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
title_full Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
title_fullStr Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
title_full_unstemmed Stress-Shot-Peened Leaf Springs Material Analysis through Nano- and Micro-Indentations
title_sort stress-shot-peened leaf springs material analysis through nano- and micro-indentations
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Heat-treated and shot-peened lightweight steels with demanding requirements for durability are applied in high-performance automotive leaf springs. Due to their heat-treatment they exhibit degraded properties in the surface-near area compared to the core. This area, which may extend until 300 μm from the surface to the core, experiences the highest bending stresses at operation. The microstructure in the surface and sub-surface layers determines the mechanical performance as well as the wear resistance. The present study refers to the material properties of a stress shot-peened 51CrV4 steel at various depths from the surface. The effect of the manufacturing process has been captured both by Vickers micro-hardness measurements and nanoindentation. The latter combined with a Fine Element Method (FEM)-based algorithm enables the determination of variations in the material’s stress–strain curves over the affected layers, which translate to internal stress changes. The nanoindentation technique has been applied here successfully for the first time ever on leaf springs. The combination of microstructural analysis, microhardness and nanoindentation captures the changes of the treated material, offering insights on the material characteristics, and yielding accurate elastoplastic material properties for local, layered-based analysis of the components’ mechanical performance at operational loading scenarios, i.e., in the framework of stress shot-peening simulation models.
topic nanoindentation
microstructural analysis
mechanical properties
shot peening
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/14/17/4795
work_keys_str_mv AT mariapappa stressshotpeenedleafspringsmaterialanalysisthroughnanoandmicroindentations
AT georgiossavaidis stressshotpeenedleafspringsmaterialanalysisthroughnanoandmicroindentations
AT nikolaosmichailidis stressshotpeenedleafspringsmaterialanalysisthroughnanoandmicroindentations
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