Identifying fatigue crack initiation through analytical calculation of temporal compliance calibrated with Computed Tomography
Ritam Pal, Amrita Basak

TL;DR
This paper presents an analytical method to identify fatigue crack initiation by monitoring compliance changes, calibrated with CT imaging, for additively manufactured materials, offering a potentially more efficient alternative to traditional calibration-dependent methods.
Contribution
The study introduces an analytical approach for detecting fatigue crack initiation that reduces reliance on calibration for different materials and manufacturing processes.
Findings
Analytical compliance calculation predicts crack initiation with 4.8% accuracy.
Compliance change correlates with fatigue crack initiation in tested materials.
Method applicable to both brittle and ductile additively manufactured materials.
Abstract
Fatigue failure is ubiquitous in engineering applications. While the total fatigue life is critical to understanding a component's operational life, for safety, regulatory compliance, and predictive maintenance, the characterization of initiation life is important. Traditionally, initiation life is characterized by potential drop method, acoustic emission technique, and strain-based measurements. However, the primary challenge with these methods lies in the necessity of calibration for each new material system. The difficulties become even more aggravated for additively manufactured components, where fatigue properties are reported to vary widely in the open literature. In this work, an analytical methodology is utilized to evaluate the initiation life of two different materials such as AlSi10Mg and SS316L, fabricated via laser-powder bed fusion (L-PBF) technique. The processing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFatigue and fracture mechanics · Non-Destructive Testing Techniques · Ultrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation
