Title: ShieldingCorrected MixedMode Thresholds
17th National Turbine Engine HCF Conference
Role of Crack Size and Microstructure in
Influencing Mixed-Mode High Cycle Fatigue
Thresholds in Ti-6Al-4V
R.K. Nalla, J.P. Campbell and R.O.
Ritchie Department of Materials Science and
Engineering, University of California, Berkeley,
CA 94720 May 15, 2002
Work supported by the U.S. Air Force Office
of Scientific Research under Grant No.
F49620-96-1-0418 under the auspices of the
Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative
(MURI) on High Cycle Fatigue to the University of
California.
2Motivation
- High Cycle Fatigue (HCF) has been identified as
the single biggest cause of failures in military
turbine engines. Such failures result in costly
engine damage/loss and related down-time, in
addition to loss of human life - A successful solution would save 2 billion
over the next 20 years - A damage-tolerant approach may offer an
alternative over the combination of Goodman
Diagram/ Safe Life (S/N) based approach used
now - The basis of the MURI has been to seek a physical
understanding behind the development of such a
damage- tolerant approach
- High Cycle Fatigue (HCF)
- Low Cycle Fatigue (LCF)
- Foreign Object Damage (FOD)
- Fretting
3Why Study Multiaxial Fatigue?
- Common in turbine engines - e.g., in association
with fretting in the dovetail/disk contact region
- High frequencies involved (1-2 kHz) may
necessitate a threshold-based methodology
incorporating mode-mixity effects - Presence of shear loading known to dramatically
reduce mode I threshold (John et al, in
Mixed-Mode Crack Behavior, ASTM STP 1359, 1999) - No information on HCF mixed-mode thresholds for
small cracks - Multiaxial fatigue research goes back to only
1969 (Iida and Kobayashi, J. Bas. Eng., 1969),
while fatigue research goes back well over a
century (Albert, Archive für Minerlogie,
Geognosie, Bergbau und Hüttenkunde, 1838) - Only two studies on Ti-6Al-4V in the archival
literature - by Pustejovsky (Eng. Fract. Mech.,
1979) and Gao et al (Multiaxial Fatigue, ASTM STP
853, 1985)
4Problem Statement and Objective
- Very little data have been reported on the role
of mode-mixity in influencing fatigue thresholds
in Ti-6Al-4V alloys - Similarly, little information is available on how
microstructure can affect such mixed-mode
thresholds - There is no information on the role of crack size
on mixed-mode thresholds in any material - Hence, our objective is to
- - compare the mixed-mode HCF threshold behavior
for two microstructures in Ti-6Al-4V with
widely differing micro- structural
dimensions, i.e., bimodal (STOA) and lamellar - - characterize the effect of mode-mixity and
load ratio on mixed-mode thresholds for
cracks with widely differing dimensions,
i.e., large (gt4 mm) and short (200 mm)
through-thickness cracks and small (lt50 mm)
surface cracks
5 Material Microstructures Investigated
Alloy Composition (wt)
A
Ti Al V
Fe O N
H Bal. 6.29 4.17
0.19 0.19 0.013 0.0041
bimodal (STOA) structure 64 primary a, grain
size 20 mm a lath spacing 1-2 mm
Uniaxial Tensile Properties
Yield Strength Ultimate Tensile Reduction
Fracture Toughness (MPa)
Strength (MPa) in Area () KIc
(MPa?m) A 930 978
45 64
B 975 1055
10 100
B
?-annealed lamellar structure prior-b grain size
1 mm a colony size 500 mm, a lath spacing
1-2 mm
6Small Fatigue Cracks
Cracks that can be considered small
Ritchie and Lankford, Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 1986
7Large, Short and Small Fatigue Cracks
- Small in one dimension
- Reduced crack-tip shielding
- Small in all dimensions
- Reduced crack-tip shielding
- Biased microstructural sampling
Ritchie and Lankford, Mater. Sci. Eng., 1986
8Asymmetric Four-Point Bend Specimen
- The offset s, from the load-line is used to
control the degree of mode-mixity, DKII /DKI, and
hence the phase angle, ? tan-1 (DKII /DKI) - Range of mixities studied DKII/DKI from 0 to
7.1 b from 0? to 82? - Linear-elastic stress-intensity solutions from He
and Hutchinson, J. Appl. Mech., 2000 - KI
9Large Crack Thresholds
- Lamellar microstructure shows superior
resistance, especially at low phase angles - Load ratio, R, and mode mixity, b, can reduce
DKI significantly for both microstructures
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fat. Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
10Single Parameter Characterization
DG (DKI2 DKII2)/E'
- Lamellar microstructure shows superior
resistance, especially at low phase angles - Threshold DGTH measured in pure mode I can be
considered as worst-case
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fat. Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
11Large Fatigue Crack Profiles
- Observed crack paths follow a path of maximum
tangential stress (MTS), i.e., one of KII 0,
for the bimodal microstructure - For the coarser-grained lamellar microstructure,
significant deviations were observed from MTS
predictions the role of microstructure becomes
critical, especially in the precrack wake
Campbell Ritchie, Metall. Mater. Trans. A, 2001
12Correction for Crack-tip Shielding
- Mode I shielding, in the form of crack closure,
determined from the compliance curve for the
opening displacements from the first deviation
from linearity on unloading DKI,eff KI,max
Kcl - Mode II shielding, in the form of asperity
rubbing and interlock, determined in an analogous
fashion from the compliance curve for shear
displacements DKII,eff DKII,maxtip -
DKII,mintip
Campbell Ritchie, Eng. Fract. Mech., 2000
13Shielding Corrected Thresholds
- Effects of mode-mixity, load ratio and
microstructure markedly reduced after taking
account of crack-tip shielding from mode I
closure and mode II crack-surface interference
Nalla, M.S. Thesis, U.C. Berkeley, 2001
14Short-Crack Thresholds
- The role of crack-tip shielding is evident from
the substantially lower thresholds - The technique for estimating the mixed-mode
shielding by Campbell et al gives reasonable,
though slightly overestimated, values for the
thresholds
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fat. Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
15Definition of the Mixed-Mode Threshold
- G calculation based on precrack
direction of subsequent propagation
G (KI2 KII2)/E'
where k1 KI k2 KII
- G calculation based on infinitesimal kink
Geff (kI2 kII2)/E'
where k1 aII(a) KI aI2(a) KII k2
a2I(a) KI a22(a) KII
b ltlt a
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Int. J. Fatigue, 2002
16Definition of the Mixed-Mode Threshold
- In general, the trend is to reduce the computed
values of DKeq,TH somewhat, except at very high
phase angles - At b 26o, however, the large crack DKeq,TH
threshold is reduced by as much as 40 this
translates into a reduction in threshold DKeq,TH
values by between 1 and 2 MPa?m - Effects are far less significant for short cracks
- Nalla, Campbell Ritchie,
Int. J. Fatigue, 2002
17Small Crack Thresholds in Mode I
- Optical micrograph showing a typical initiation
site for the bimodal microstructure - Initiation
predominantly occurs in the primary-? grains. - SEM image of crack initiation and early growth
along planar slip bands leading to facet type
fracture surface - EBSD analysis of fractured
a-grains 1 to 3 revealed near-basal orientation
of the fracture plane.
(Courtesy Dr. J.O. Peters)
Nalla et al, Metall. Mater. Trans. A, 2002
18Mixed-Mode Small-Crack Testing
KI Newman Raju, Eng. Fract. Mech., 1981
KII He Hutchinson, Eng. Fract. Mech., 2000
wide bend bar specimen
- the tensile loading component, ?22 induces the
mode I contribution - the shear loading component, ?12 induces the mode
II and mode III components - the in-plane component, ?11 makes no contribution.
small inclined-crack specimen
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fatigue Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
19Inclined Semi-Elliptical Surface Crack
- A typical crack path taken by a
microstructurally-small crack under mixed-mode
loading (R 0.1, ? 28o, ?G 20 J/m2, angle of
inclination ? 50o) - Strong influence of local microstructure near the
crack tip is evident on the crack path
?
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fatigue Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
20Mixed-Mode Small-Crack Thresholds
- Thresholds for small cracks (lt50 ?m) are
significantly lower than for large (gt4 mm) and
short (200 ?m) cracks, especially under
shear-dominant loading - Large reductions in DKEQ,TH (up to 7 times) and
DGTH (up to 50 times) with respect to large
cracks seen for microstructurally-small cracks
Nalla, Campbell Ritchie, Fatigue Fract. Eng.
Mater. Struct., 2002
21Conclusions
- Marked effect of mode-mixity and load ratio on
mixed-mode fatigue thresholds for large (gt 4 mm)
through-thickness cracks - Thresholds DGTH values measured in pure Mode I
represent a worst-case condition - Lamellar structure generally exhibited higher
large-crack thresholds - Thresholds for short (200 ?m) through-thickness
cracks were considerably lower and were
relatively insensitive to load ratio, mode-mixity
and microstructure. This was attributed to a
reduced role of crack-tip shielding - Thresholds for microstructurally-small (lt 50 ?m)
surface cracks in the bimodal microstructure were
similarly insensitive to load ratio and
mode-mixity, and were substantially lower than
those for large cracks. This was related to
limited crack-tip shielding and biased
microstructural sampling associated with the
small cracks.