Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading

The actual service loading histories of most engineering components are characterized by variable amplitudes and are sometimes rather complicated. The goal of this study was to estimate the fatigue life of nickel-chromium-molybdenum 30CrNiMo8HH steel alloy under axial and pure torsion variable ampli...

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Main Author: Ibrahim, Elfaitori
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7216
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-72162013-10-04T04:11:53ZIbrahim, Elfaitori2013-01-18T17:08:44Z2013-01-18T17:08:44Z2013-01-18T17:08:44Z2012http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7216The actual service loading histories of most engineering components are characterized by variable amplitudes and are sometimes rather complicated. The goal of this study was to estimate the fatigue life of nickel-chromium-molybdenum 30CrNiMo8HH steel alloy under axial and pure torsion variable amplitude loading (VAL) conditions. The investigation was directed at two primary factors that are believed to have an influence on fatigue life under such loading conditions: load sequence and mean stress. The experimental work for this research included two-step loading, non-zero mean strain loading, and VAL tests, the results of which were added to previously determined fully reversed strain-controlled fatigue data. The effect of load sequence on fatigue life was examined through the application of the commonly used linear damage accumulation rule along with the Manson and Marco–Starkey damage accumulation methods, the latter of which takes load sequence into account. Based on the two-step experimental results, both the Manson and Marco–Starkey methods were modified in order to eliminate the empirically determined constants normally required for these two methods. The effect of mean stress on fatigue life was investigated with the use of three life prediction models: Smith–Watson–Topper (SWT), Fatemi–Socie (FS), and Jahed–Varvani (JV). The cycles from the VAL histories were counted using a rainflow counting procedure that maintains the applied strain sequence, and a novel method was developed for the estimation of the total energy density required for the JV model. For two-step loading and for all three fatigue models employed, the modified damage accumulation methods provided superior fatigue life predictions. However, regardless of the damage accumulation method applied, the most satisfactory fatigue life correlation for VAL was obtained using the energy-based JV model.enFatigue lifeVariable amplitude loadingDamage accumulationLoad sequenceMean stressCycle countingFatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude LoadingThesis or DissertationMechanical and Mechatronics EngineeringMaster of Applied ScienceMechanical Engineering
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Fatigue life
Variable amplitude loading
Damage accumulation
Load sequence
Mean stress
Cycle counting
Mechanical Engineering
spellingShingle Fatigue life
Variable amplitude loading
Damage accumulation
Load sequence
Mean stress
Cycle counting
Mechanical Engineering
Ibrahim, Elfaitori
Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
description The actual service loading histories of most engineering components are characterized by variable amplitudes and are sometimes rather complicated. The goal of this study was to estimate the fatigue life of nickel-chromium-molybdenum 30CrNiMo8HH steel alloy under axial and pure torsion variable amplitude loading (VAL) conditions. The investigation was directed at two primary factors that are believed to have an influence on fatigue life under such loading conditions: load sequence and mean stress. The experimental work for this research included two-step loading, non-zero mean strain loading, and VAL tests, the results of which were added to previously determined fully reversed strain-controlled fatigue data. The effect of load sequence on fatigue life was examined through the application of the commonly used linear damage accumulation rule along with the Manson and Marco–Starkey damage accumulation methods, the latter of which takes load sequence into account. Based on the two-step experimental results, both the Manson and Marco–Starkey methods were modified in order to eliminate the empirically determined constants normally required for these two methods. The effect of mean stress on fatigue life was investigated with the use of three life prediction models: Smith–Watson–Topper (SWT), Fatemi–Socie (FS), and Jahed–Varvani (JV). The cycles from the VAL histories were counted using a rainflow counting procedure that maintains the applied strain sequence, and a novel method was developed for the estimation of the total energy density required for the JV model. For two-step loading and for all three fatigue models employed, the modified damage accumulation methods provided superior fatigue life predictions. However, regardless of the damage accumulation method applied, the most satisfactory fatigue life correlation for VAL was obtained using the energy-based JV model.
author Ibrahim, Elfaitori
author_facet Ibrahim, Elfaitori
author_sort Ibrahim, Elfaitori
title Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
title_short Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
title_full Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
title_fullStr Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
title_full_unstemmed Fatigue Life Assessment of 30CrNiMo8HH Steel Under Variable Amplitude Loading
title_sort fatigue life assessment of 30crnimo8hh steel under variable amplitude loading
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7216
work_keys_str_mv AT ibrahimelfaitori fatiguelifeassessmentof30crnimo8hhsteelundervariableamplitudeloading
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