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Cracking (fracturing)
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Image
Published: 01 January 1987
Fig. 611 Surface of fatigue-crack fracture in a specimen of AISI type 301 stainless steel that was highly stressed, breaking in 2000 cycles. Crack growth was very irregular, with many pronounced offsets. At center, twin boundaries have affected crack propagation. Area in rectangle is shown
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Image
Published: 01 January 1987
Fig. 735 Stress-corrosion cracking fracture in threaded specimen of 13-8 PH stainless steel (same properties as in Fig. 726 ) loaded to 75% of tensile strength in a 3.5% NaCl solution. See also Fig. 736 . 6×
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Image
Published: 15 January 2021
Fig. 55 Stress-corrosion-cracking fracture in a C-ring specimen cut from an aluminum alloy 7039-T6 plate. Fracture occurred under applied tensile stress during immersion in a salt solution. No appreciable evidence of corrosive attack is visible on the ring surface or on the fracture surface
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Image
Published: 15 January 2021
Fig. 31 Scanning electron microscopy image of the stress-corrosion cracking fracture surface in type 316 stainless steel exposed to a boiling solution of 42 wt% MgCl 2 . The fracture in general exhibited the fan-shaped or transgranular cleavage features shown in (a), although some areas
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Image
Published: 30 August 2021
Fig. 41 Fatigue crack fracture surface after opening with cryofracture. (a) Before cleaning; oil deposits and corrosion visible on crack surface. (b) After cleaning; beach marks readily observed. (c) High-magnification view of crack origin in area indicated by rectangle in (b); beach marks
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Image
Published: 15 May 2022
Fig. 12 Micrograph showing environmental stress cracking fractures originating at a design corner within a molded component. Multiple cracks initiated, extended, and subsequently coalesced to form the fracture. Ridgelike features representing crack unions are present between the individual
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Image
Published: 15 May 2022
Fig. 14 Micrograph of an environmental stress crack fracture surface exhibiting the clear location of crack initiation. The crack origin has a very smooth texture and is bounded by a thumbnail marking.
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Image
Published: 15 May 2022
Fig. 15 Micrograph of an environmental stress crack fracture surface exhibiting a relatively smooth texture. The fracture transitions into more coarse features representing the final fracture zone.
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Image
Published: 01 June 2024
Fig. 12 Example of a fatigue crack fracture surface in aluminum alloy 7050-T7451, where two of four polepiece backscattered electron detectors were turned off to give a shadowing effect. Source: Ref 15
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Image
Published: 01 June 2024
Fig. 13 Example of a fatigue crack fracture surface in aluminum alloy 7050-T7451 that has been cut with a gallium focused ion beam, showing that the ion beam cut has revealed a persistent slip band in the subsurface structure that is consistent with the fatigue surface. The crack was grown
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Image
Published: 01 June 2024
Fig. 19 Environmental stress-cracking fracture surface for a polycarbonate component consisting of rib marks and localized deformed polymer. (a) Uncoated specimen, low-vacuum mode, backscattered electron compositional imaging, 10 kV accelerating voltage with a tungsten thermal-emission SEM
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Image
Published: 01 June 2024
Fig. 17 OM images of a CPVC environmental stress cracking fracture surface after exposure to a 50:50 mixture of DOP and mineral oil at 1% strain. (a) Overall fracture surface highlighting multiple crack origins along the bottom edge of the sample (red arrows). (b) Magnified image of the slow
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Book Chapter
Book: Fractography
Series: ASM Handbook Archive
Volume: 12
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1987
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v12.a0000610
EISBN: 978-1-62708-181-8
... Abstract This article is an atlas of fractographs that helps in understanding the causes and mechanisms of fracture of austenitic stainless steels and in identifying and interpreting the morphology of fracture surfaces. The fractographs illustrate the following: fatigue-crack fracture, rock...
Abstract
This article is an atlas of fractographs that helps in understanding the causes and mechanisms of fracture of austenitic stainless steels and in identifying and interpreting the morphology of fracture surfaces. The fractographs illustrate the following: fatigue-crack fracture, rock candy fracture, cleavage fracture, brittle fracture, high-cycle fatigue fracture, fatigue striations, hydrogen-embrittlement failure, creep crack propagation, fatigue crack nucleation, intergranular creep fracture, torsional overload fracture, stress-corrosion cracking, and grain-boundary damage of these steels. The austenitic stainless steel components include spring wires, preheater-reactor slurry transfer lines and gas lines of coal-liquefaction pilot plants, oil feed tubes and suction couch rolls of paper machines, cortical screws and compression hip screws of orthopedic implants, and Jewett nails.
Book: Fatigue and Fracture
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 19
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1996
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v19.a0002366
EISBN: 978-1-62708-193-1
... Abstract This article provides information on the typical experimental observations of formation and propagation of small fatigue cracks under various stress states and explores the relation to long crack fracture mixed-mode fracture mechanics. It discusses state I crystallographic and stage II...
Abstract
This article provides information on the typical experimental observations of formation and propagation of small fatigue cracks under various stress states and explores the relation to long crack fracture mixed-mode fracture mechanics. It discusses state I crystallographic and stage II normal stress-dominated growth, along with some observations regarding the influence of combined stress state on the propagation of small cracks. The article discusses the differences between low-cycle fatigue and high-cycle fatigue (HCF) behaviors. Several other features of multiaxial fatigue are also explained, including mean stress effects, sequences of stress/strain amplitude or stress state, nonproportional loading and cycle counting, and HCF fatigue limits. In addition, the article covers the formation and propagation of cracks on the order of several grain sizes in diameter in initially isotropic and ductile structural alloys.
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 11A
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 30 August 2021
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v11A.a0006820
EISBN: 978-1-62708-329-4
... lubrication, the measurement of the backlash, and the necessary factors for starting the failure analysis. Next, the article explains various gear failure causes, including wear, scuffing, Hertzian fatigue, cracking, fracture, and bending fatigue, and finally presents examples of gear and reducer failure...
Abstract
This article first reviews variations within the most common types of gears, namely spur, helical, worm, and straight and spiral bevel. It then provides information on gear tooth contact and gear metallurgy. This is followed by sections describing the important points of gear lubrication, the measurement of the backlash, and the necessary factors for starting the failure analysis. Next, the article explains various gear failure causes, including wear, scuffing, Hertzian fatigue, cracking, fracture, and bending fatigue, and finally presents examples of gear and reducer failure analysis.
Image
Published: 01 January 2001
Fig. 14 Tangent construction plot used to represent the stability of bridged cracks. Fracture resistance ( K R ) is plotted against crack extension (Δ a ). Stress-intensity factor, K I , is plotted against total crack length.
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Image
Published: 15 May 2022
Fig. 18 Scanning electron micrograph showing a final fracture zone on an environmental stress crack fracture surface. The features are characteristic of final mechanical overload.
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Image
Published: 01 January 1987
Fig. 19, 20 A second set of views at higher magnification showing another area of the stress-corrosion cracking fracture in aluminum alloy 7075-T6 in Fig. 17, 18 . Similar to the preceding set, this set of views shows a variety of grain surfaces resulting from intergranular rupture. The TEM
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Book: Fractography
Series: ASM Handbook Archive
Volume: 12
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 1987
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v12.a0000612
EISBN: 978-1-62708-181-8
... fracture, low-cycle and high-cycle fatigue fracture, fracture surface, brittle intergranular fracture, hydrogen embrittlement, and intergranular stress-corrosion cracking of stainless steel components of these steels. The components include high-pressure compressor parts, springs, deflector yokes...
Abstract
This article is an atlas of fractographs that helps in understanding the causes and mechanisms of fracture of precipitation-hardening stainless steels and in identifying and interpreting the morphology of fracture surfaces. The fractographs illustrate the cup-and-cone tension-overload fracture, low-cycle and high-cycle fatigue fracture, fracture surface, brittle intergranular fracture, hydrogen embrittlement, and intergranular stress-corrosion cracking of stainless steel components of these steels. The components include high-pressure compressor parts, springs, deflector yokes of aircraft main landing gears, and aircraft engine mount beams.
Image
Published: 01 January 2001
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