Our formalisation of the Shear Stress-Maximum Variance Method takes as a starting point the hypothesis that, in ductile materials subjected to fatigue loading, the crack initiation planes, i.e. the so-called Stage I planes, are those containing the direction experiencing the maximum variance of the resolved shear stress. From a computational point of view, the most remarkable implication of the above assumption is that, as soon as the variance and covariance terms characterising the considered load history are known, the effective time needed to estimate the orientation of the critical plane does not depend on the length of the load history itself. Further, such a computational efficiency is seen to be associated with an high-level of accuracy in estimating fatigue lifetime of both plain and notched engineering components, this holding true under constant as well as under variable amplitude uniaxial/multiaxial fatigue loading. In this scenario, through a large number of experimental results taken from the literature, the present paper investigates whether, independently from the degree of multiaxiality and non-proportionality of the applied loading history, the direction of maximum variance of the resolved shear stress is also capable of accurately estimating the orientation of Stage I crack paths
Estimating the orientation of Stage I crack paths through the direction of maximum variance of the resolved shear stress
SUSMEL, Luca;TOVO, Roberto;
2014
Abstract
Our formalisation of the Shear Stress-Maximum Variance Method takes as a starting point the hypothesis that, in ductile materials subjected to fatigue loading, the crack initiation planes, i.e. the so-called Stage I planes, are those containing the direction experiencing the maximum variance of the resolved shear stress. From a computational point of view, the most remarkable implication of the above assumption is that, as soon as the variance and covariance terms characterising the considered load history are known, the effective time needed to estimate the orientation of the critical plane does not depend on the length of the load history itself. Further, such a computational efficiency is seen to be associated with an high-level of accuracy in estimating fatigue lifetime of both plain and notched engineering components, this holding true under constant as well as under variable amplitude uniaxial/multiaxial fatigue loading. In this scenario, through a large number of experimental results taken from the literature, the present paper investigates whether, independently from the degree of multiaxiality and non-proportionality of the applied loading history, the direction of maximum variance of the resolved shear stress is also capable of accurately estimating the orientation of Stage I crack pathsI documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.