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Multiscale Fatigue Crack Initiation and Propagation of Engineering Materials: Structural Integrity and Microstructural Worthiness : Fatigue Crack Growth Behaviour of Small and Large Bodies /

Contributor(s): Sih, G. C [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Solid Mechanics and its Applications: 152Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2008.Description: XIV, 380 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781402085208.Subject(s): Materials science | Structural mechanics | Materials Science | Materials Science, general | Structural MechanicsDDC classification: 620.11 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Application of Virtual Testing for Obtaining Fracture Allowable of Aerospace and Aircraft Materials -- An Equivalent Block Approach to Crack Growth -- Prediction of Fatigue Crack Growth Rates in Ti-6Al-4V Alloy -- Some Practical Implications of Exponential Crack Growth -- Fatigue Behaviour of FS, LB and MIG Welds of AA6061-T6 and AA6082-T6 -- Fatigue Damage from Surface to Bulk -- Microcracking in High Temperature Low Cycle Fatigue -- Invariant Form of Micro-/Macro-Cracking in Fatigue -- Fatigue Crack Growth Rate of Cable-Stayed Portion of Runyang Bridge: Part I – Cable Crack Growth Due to Disproportionate Cable Tightening/Loosening and Traffic Loading -- Fatigue Crack Growth Rate of Cable-Stayed Portion of Runyang Bridge: Part II – Steel Wire Crack Growth Due to Disproportionate Cable Tightening/Loosening and Traffic Loading -- Fatigue of Small-Scale Metal Materials: From Micro- to Nano-Scale -- Assessment of Fatigue Damage in Heterogeneous Materials by Application of a Novel Compliance Technique -- Fatigue Crack Growth of Aircraft Aluminum Alloys.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book elucidates the correlation of fatigue crack growth data to multiscale cracking, particularly to the understanding of micrographs influenced by mechanical disturbance and thermodynamic variables. Attention is given to the interpretation of test data by fatigue crack growth rate using two empirical parameters in consistence with the fracture control methodology currently used by industry. Micrograph and crack growth rate data are presented for a host of metals used by the aerospace and nuclear industry. Furthermore, these data can be shown to lie on a straight line for the two parameter model that traditionally refers to regions I, II, and III. Results for small and large cracks can thus be connected to provide fatigue life prediction with data from the microscopic scale level such that the interactive effects of loading, geometry and material by mechanical tests are accounted for.
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Application of Virtual Testing for Obtaining Fracture Allowable of Aerospace and Aircraft Materials -- An Equivalent Block Approach to Crack Growth -- Prediction of Fatigue Crack Growth Rates in Ti-6Al-4V Alloy -- Some Practical Implications of Exponential Crack Growth -- Fatigue Behaviour of FS, LB and MIG Welds of AA6061-T6 and AA6082-T6 -- Fatigue Damage from Surface to Bulk -- Microcracking in High Temperature Low Cycle Fatigue -- Invariant Form of Micro-/Macro-Cracking in Fatigue -- Fatigue Crack Growth Rate of Cable-Stayed Portion of Runyang Bridge: Part I – Cable Crack Growth Due to Disproportionate Cable Tightening/Loosening and Traffic Loading -- Fatigue Crack Growth Rate of Cable-Stayed Portion of Runyang Bridge: Part II – Steel Wire Crack Growth Due to Disproportionate Cable Tightening/Loosening and Traffic Loading -- Fatigue of Small-Scale Metal Materials: From Micro- to Nano-Scale -- Assessment of Fatigue Damage in Heterogeneous Materials by Application of a Novel Compliance Technique -- Fatigue Crack Growth of Aircraft Aluminum Alloys.

This book elucidates the correlation of fatigue crack growth data to multiscale cracking, particularly to the understanding of micrographs influenced by mechanical disturbance and thermodynamic variables. Attention is given to the interpretation of test data by fatigue crack growth rate using two empirical parameters in consistence with the fracture control methodology currently used by industry. Micrograph and crack growth rate data are presented for a host of metals used by the aerospace and nuclear industry. Furthermore, these data can be shown to lie on a straight line for the two parameter model that traditionally refers to regions I, II, and III. Results for small and large cracks can thus be connected to provide fatigue life prediction with data from the microscopic scale level such that the interactive effects of loading, geometry and material by mechanical tests are accounted for.

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