Title of article :
A low cycle fatigue model of a short-fibre reinforced 6061 aluminium alloy metal matrix composite
Author/Authors :
H.-Z. Ding، نويسنده , , H. Biermann ، نويسنده , , O. Hartmann، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
A low cycle fatigue model has been developed to predict the fatigue life of both the unreinforced aluminium alloy and the short-fibre reinforced aluminium alloy metal-matrix composites based solely on crack propagation from microstructural features. In this approach a crack is assumed to initiate and grow from a microstructural feature on the first cycle. The model assumes that there is a fatigue-damaged zone ahead of the crack tip within which the actual degradation of the material takes place. The low-cycle fatigue crack growth and the condition for failure are controlled by the amount of cyclic plasticity generated within the fatigue-damaged zone ahead of the crack tip and by the ability of the short fibres to constrain this cyclic plasticity. The fatigue crack growth rate is directly correlated to the range of crack-tip opening displacement. The empirical Coffin–Manson and Basquin laws have been derived theoretically and applied to compare with total-strain controlled low-cycle fatigue life data obtained on the unreinforced 6061 aluminium alloy at 25 °C and on the aluminium alloy AA6061 matrix reinforced with Al2O3 Saffil short-fibres of a volume fraction of 20 vol.% and test temperatures from −100 to 150 °C. The proposed model can give predicted fatigue lives in good agreement with the experimental total-strain controlled fatigue data at both high strain low-cycle fatigue and low strain high-cycle fatigue regime. It is remarkable that the addition of high-strength Al2O3 fibres in the 6061 aluminium alloy matrix will not only strengthen the microstructure of the 6061 aluminium alloy, but also channel deformation at the tip of a crack into the matrix regions between the fibres and therefore constrain the plastic deformation in the matrix. The overall expected effect is therefore the reduction of the fatigue ductility.
Keywords :
D. Life prediction , B. Fatigue , B. Modelling , A. Metal-matrix composites (MMCs) , C. Crack
Journal title :
COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Journal title :
COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY