Structural analysis

Fatigue (material)

In materials science, fatigue is the initiation and propagation of cracks in a material due to cyclic loading. Once a fatigue crack has initiated, it grows a small amount with each loading cycle, typically producing striations on some parts of the fracture surface. The crack will continue to grow until it reaches a critical size, which occurs when the stress intensity factor of the crack exceeds the fracture toughness of the material, producing rapid propagation and typically complete fracture of the structure. Fatigue has traditionally been associated with the failure of metal components which led to the term metal fatigue. In the nineteenth century, the sudden failing of metal railway axles was thought to be caused by the metal crystallising because of the brittle appearance of the fracture surface, but this has since been disproved. Most materials, such as composites, plastics and ceramics, seem to experience some sort of fatigue-related failure. To aid in predicting the fatigue life of a component, fatigue tests are carried out using coupons to measure the rate of crack growth by applying constant amplitude cyclic loading and averaging the measured growth of a crack over thousands of cycles. However, there are also a number of special cases that need to be considered where the rate of crack growth is significantly different compared to that obtained from constant amplitude testing. Such as the reduced rate of growth that occurs for small loads near the threshold or after the application of an overload; and the increased rate of crack growth associated with short cracks or after the application of an underload. If the loads are above a certain threshold, microscopic cracks will begin to initiate at stress concentrations such as holes, persistent slip bands (PSBs), composite interfaces or grain boundaries in metals. The stress values that cause fatigue damage are typically much less than the yield strength of the material. (Wikipedia).

Fatigue (material)
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Using S-N curves to predict the fatigue of materials

Fatigue is failure over time under cyclic loading conditions. The cycling conditions can be "reversible" where the average is zero and loading cycles between tension and compression, "repeated," when the load alternates between a maximum and minimum tensile load, and "random" when the loa

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

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Fatigue Failure | Engineering Approach

This is 2nd part of Fatigue failure video lecture series. Here fatigue failure is explained in a practical, engineering point of view. Discussion starts with why actual value of endurance limit is way below ideal endurance limit obtained from R R Moore rotating beam fatigue test. Effect of

From playlist Mechanical Equipment Design

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Fatigue Failure Analysis

In this video lecture we will learn about the phenomenon of fatigue failure. Here concepts like endurance limit, crack propagation,SN diagram, Goodman diagram and Soderberg diagram are explained in a conceptual way. A detailed article on fatigue failure anlaysis is given here - https://www

From playlist Mechanical Engineering

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An Introduction to Stress and Strain

This video is an introduction to stress and strain, which are fundamental concepts that are used to describe how an object responds to externally applied loads. Stress is a measure of the distribution of internal forces that develop within a body to resist these applied loads. There are

From playlist Mechanics of Materials / Strength of Materials

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Understanding Fatigue Failure and S-N Curves

Fatigue failure is a failure mechanism which results from the formation and growth of cracks under repeated cyclic stress loading, leading to fracture. It can result in failure at stress levels well below the material yield or ultimate strengths. In this video I discuss the mechanisms beh

From playlist Mechanics of Materials / Strength of Materials

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Understanding Material Strength, Ductility and Toughness

Strength, ductility and toughness are three very important, closely related material properties. The yield and ultimate strengths tell us how much stress a material can withstand, and are often used to define failure. Ductility tells us how much plastic deformation a material undergoes be

From playlist Mechanics of Materials / Strength of Materials

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Physics - Mechanics: Stress and Strain (4 of 16) Bone Strength

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain the compression and tensile stress of a human bone.

From playlist PHYSICS 10.5 STRESS AND STRAIN

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Thermal stresses and thermal shock resistance

When materials of different thermal expansion are joined together they generate thermal stresses when heated or cooled since the strain from expansion/contraction is mismatched. We can calculate this stress. We can also calculate a measure of thermal shock resistance by understanding what

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

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Tungsten Vs. Titanium Comparison

Titanium and Tungsten are some of the strongest metals on the planet. Which material do you think is the strongest of the two? 🤔 What is the difference between Tungsten and Titanium? 🧐 Watch our video to discover the metal qualities of Tungsten and Titanium. 🔩🎥 To get the latest science

From playlist Theory to Reality

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Fracture Mechanics

0:00 stress concentrators 3:24 stress intensity factor 5:07 Griffith theory of brittle fracture brief origin 10:20 Griffith fracture equation 11:12 Y, geometric crack size parameter 13:46 KIc fracture toughness 17:01 fracture critical flaw size example question 21:11 general characteristic

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2018

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Fatigue crack growth in materials (Paris Law)

0:00 how to visualize cracks non-destructively 5:45 aspects of ceramic fracture 10:26 aspects of polymer fracture (crazing) 16:26 impact fracture testing and ductile to brittle transition 21:31 fatigue and cyclic stresses, S-N plots 30:25 frequency dependence of fatigue 31:47 benchmarks, c

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering Fall 2019

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MagLab Science Café: Boot Camp for Metals that Make the Cut in High-Field Magnets

Boot Camp for Metals that Make the Cut in High-Field Magnets 12-5-2017 Bob Walsh, Senior Research Associate

From playlist Science Café

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Day 11 Crack Growth and Fatigue

0:00 reading quiz and review of Griffith fracture toughness 6:10 learning objectives 6:40 ceramic fracture, stress corrosion, static fatigue 10:23 polymer fracture 15:21 testing for fracture energy (impact testing) 16:37 ductile - brittle transition 19:34 cyclic stresses and fatigue failu

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2017

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Fatigue crack growth and steady-state creep

0:00 variability in S-N curves and influence of frequency 3:16 benchmarks, striations, clamshell patterns from crack growth 5:07 Crack growth rates and cycles until failure derivation 15:02 example of cycles until failure 22:44 factors affecting fatigue life 24:00 thermal stresses 24:55 c

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2018

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Critical Stress

An explanation of the temperature dependence of critical stress for various deformation mechanisms in materials.

From playlist Ceramic Material Properties

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Day 12 Creep

0:00 demo of quenched metastable Al-Zn ingots 5:56 reading quiz 10:50 review of crack growth example problem 33:25 how to read log-log plots 36:05 other factors affecting fatigue (case hardening, shot peening) 40:56 thermal stresses 43:55 creep

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2017

Related pages

Log-normal distribution | Sine wave | Weibull distribution | Young's modulus | Censoring (statistics) | Temperature | Histogram | Crack growth equation | Birnbaum–Saunders distribution | Linear regression | Extreme value theory | Logarithmic scale | Statistics | Stochastic | Yield (engineering) | Stress (mechanics) | Shape optimization