Title: Materials Science
1Fracture, Toughness, Fatigue, and Creep
- Materials Science
-
- Manufacturing PROCESSES
2Why Study Failure
In order to know the reasons behind the
occurrence of failure so that we can prevent
failure of products by improving design in the
light of failure reasons
3Mechanical Failure
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
How do flaws in a material initiate failure?
How is fracture resistance quantified how do
different material classes compare?
How do we estimate the stress to fracture?
How do loading rate, loading history, and
temperature affect the failure stress?
Computer chip-cyclic thermal loading.
Hip implant-cyclic loading from walking.
Ship-cyclic loading from waves.
4What is a Fracture?
- Fracture is the separation of a body into two or
more pieces in response to an imposed stress that
is static and at temperatures that are low
relative to the melting temperature of the
material. - The applied stress may be tensile, compressive,
shear, or torsional - Any fracture process involves two stepscrack
formation and propagationin response to an
imposed stress.
5Fracture Modes
- Ductile fracture
- Occurs with plastic deformation
- Material absorbs energy before fracture
- Crack is called stable crack plastic deformation
occurs with crack growth. Also, increasing stress
is required for crack propagation.
- Brittle fracture
- Little or no plastic deformation
- Material absorb low energy before fracture
- Crack is called unstable crack.
- Catastrophic
6Ductile vs Brittle Failure
Classification
Ductile fracture is usually desirable!
Ductile warning before fracture, as increasing
is required for crack growth
Brittle No warning
7Example Failure of a Pipe
Ductile failure --one/two piece(s)
--large deformation
8Moderately Ductile Failure- Cup Cone Fracture
Evolution to failure
crack occurs perpendicular to tensile force
applied
9Ductile vs. Brittle Failure
cup-and-cone fracture
brittle fracture
10Transgranular vs Intergranular Fracture
Intergranular Fracture
Transgranular Fracture
11Brittle Fracture Surfaces
Transgranular (within grains)
Intergranular (between grains)
304 S. Steel (metal)
316 S. Steel (metal)
160 mm
4 mm
Polypropylene (polymer)
Al Oxide (ceramic)
3 mm
1 mm
12Stress Concentration- Stress Raisers
- Suppose an internal flaw (crack) already exits
in a material and it is assumed to have a shape
like a elliptical hole - The maximum stress (sm) occurs at crack tip
- where ?t radius of curvature
- so applied stress
- sm stress at crack tip
- Kt Stress concentration factor
sm so
?t
Theoretical fracture strength is higher than
practical one Why?
13Concentration of Stress at Crack Tip
14Engineering Fracture Design
Avoid sharp corners!
s
Kt
15Crack Propagation
- Cracks propagate due to sharpness of crack tip
- A plastic material deforms at the tip, blunting
the crack. - deformed region
- brittle
- Effect of stress raiser is more significant in
brittle materials than in ductile materials. When
sm exceeds sy , plastic deformation of metal in
the region of crack occurs thus blunting crack.
However, in brittle material, it does not happen.
plastic
When sm sy
16Fracture Toughness Design Against Crack Growth
Crack growth condition
Largest, most stressed cracks grow first!
sc
sc
17Fracture Toughness
- Brittle materials do not undergo large plastic
deformation, so they posses low KIC than ductile
ones. - KIC increases with increase in temp and with
reduction in grain size if other elements are
held constant - KIC reduces with increase in strain rate
18Design Example Aircraft Wing
Material has Kc 26 MPa-m0.5
Two designs to consider...
Design B --use same material --largest flaw
is 4 mm --failure stress ?
Design A --largest flaw is 9 mm --failure
stress 112 MPa
Key point Y and Kc are the same in both
designs.
Reducing flaw size pays off!
19Impact Tests
- A material may have a high tensile strength and
yet be unsuitable for shock loading conditions - Impact testing is testing an object's ability to
resist high-rate loading. - An impact test is a test for determining the
energy absorbed in fracturing a test piece at
high velocity - Types of Impact Tests -gt Izod test and Charpy
Impact test - In these tests a load swings from a given height
to strike the specimen, and the energy dissipated
in the fracture is measured
20A. Charpy Test
Impact energy Kinetic energy energy absorbed
by specimen
Energy absorbed during test is determined from
difference of pendulum height
21b. Izod Test
- Izod test varies from charpy in respect of
holding of specimen
22Effect of Temperature on Toughness
Increasing temperature... --increases EL
and Kc
Ductile-to-Brittle Transition Temperature
(DBTT)...
Low strength FCC metals (e.g., Cu, Ni)
Low strength BCC metals (e.g., iron at T lt 914C)
polymers
Impact Energy
More Ductile
Brittle
s
High strength materials (
gt E/150)
y
Temperature
Ductile-to-brittle
transition temperature
23Fatigue Test
- Fatigue is a form of failure that occurs in
structures subjected to dynamic and fluctuating
loads (e.g. bridges, aircrafts, ships and m/c
components) - The term Fatigue is used because this type of
failure occurs after a lengthy period of repeated
stress of strain cycling. - Failure stress in fatigue is normally lower than
yield stress under static loading. - Fatigue failure is brittle in nature even in
ductile metals - The failure begins with initiation and
propagation of cracks
24Types of Cyclic Stresses
25Types of Cyclic Stresses
Random Stress Cycle
26Terms Related to Cyclic Stresses
- Mean stress
- Range of stress
- Stress Amplitude
- Stress Ratio
274. Creep
- Creep is defined as time dependent plastic
deformation under constant static load/stress
(steam turbines blades under centrifugal force,
pipes under steam pressure) at elevated
temperatures - At relatively high temperatures creep appears to
occur at all stress levels, - But the creep rate increases with increasing
stress at a given temperature.
284. Creep Test
- A creep test involves a tensile specimen under a
Constant Load OR Constant Stress maintained at a
constant temperature. - Temperature Greater than 0.4Tm
29 Stress Temp Effects on Creep
- Time to rupture decreases as imposed stress or
temperature increases - Steady creep rate increases with increase of
stress and temperature
30