Additive Manufacturing Letters (Dec 2022)

Uniform fatigue damage tolerance assessment for additively manufactured and cast Al-Si alloys: size and mean stress effects

  • Jochen Tenkamp,
  • Sebastian Stammkötter,
  • Mohamed Merghany,
  • Frank Walther

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
p. 100076

Abstract

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The near-net-shape manufacturing in additive manufactured and cast of Al-Si alloys results in a heterogeneous solidification and cooling of the parts, leading to significant gradients in microstructural and defect features as well as deformation behavior. In this paper, an elastic-plastic fracture mechanical model for uniform fatigue damage tolerance assessment of Al-Si alloys was further qualified and extended for a uniform view of different testing volumes as well as various stress ratios between R = -2…0.5 based on the fracture mechanical approaches of Murakami (√area) and Shiozawa for a reliable main crack defect-based mechanical design of fatigue-loaded structures. The linear-elastic fracture mechanical (LEFM) approaches of Murakami, Murakami-Schijve and Shiozawa were used to calculate defect-based lifetime curves, where the cyclic stress intensity factor (ΔK) at the failure-initiating defect (√area) was used to describe the local stress concentration conditions (so-called K-N curves) instead of nominal stress-based S-N curves. The LEFM-based K-N curves did not allow a unified assessment of fatigue behavior. Therefore, the cyclic stress-strain (CSS) behavior (K’, n’) was used for a plasticity-modification of the LEFM approach based on the elastic-plastic fracture mechanical (EPFM) approach of Fischer by calculating the effective cyclic J integral (ΔJeff) to plot J-based K-N curves, called Kj-N curves. This EPFM approach could be qualified for a uniform and reliable fatigue damage tolerance assessment of AM and sand cast Al-Si alloys for the HCF regime.

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