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Technical Paper

Thermo-Mechanical Fatigue (TMF) Life of Ductile SiMo Cast Iron with Aluminum Addition

2021-04-06
2021-01-0281
Strain controlled thermo-mechanical fatigue (TMF) tests were conducted on a high Silicon ductile cast iron (SiMo) as the baseline material and a similar SiMo cast iron with aluminum addition (SiMoAl). The much improved fatigue life with aluminum addition is analyzed using the integrated creep-fatigue theory (ICFT) in combination with the metallurgical analysis on the tested coupons. Addition of about 3 wt.% Aluminum significantly improved TMF life of the SiMo cast iron. The results are explained by elimination of brittleness at middle temperature range, the higher flow stress, lower creep rate and higher oxidation resistance from Al addition.
Technical Paper

Thermo-Mechanical Fatigue Testing of Welded Tubes for Exhaust Applications

2018-04-03
2018-01-0090
Selected ferritic stainless steel sheets for exhaust applications were tested under thermo-mechanical fatigue (TMF) condition in the temperature range of 400-800 °C with partial constraint. Straight welded tubes were used as the testing coupons to withstand large compression without buckling, and to understand the effect of welding as well. Repeated tests confirmed the observed failure scenario for each material type. The hysteresis loop behaviors were also simulated using the mechanism-based integrated creep and fatigue theory (ICFT) model. Although more development work is needed, for quick material screening purpose this type of testing could be a very cost effective solution for materials and tube weld development for exhaust applications.
Technical Paper

Failure Mechanisms and Damage Model of Ductile Cast Iron under Low-Cycle Fatigue Conditions

2013-04-08
2013-01-0391
Strain-controlled low-cycle fatigue (LCF) experiments were conducted on ductile cast iron at total strain rates of 1.2/min, 0.12/min and 0.012/min in a temperature range of RT ~ 800°C. An integrated creep-fatigue (ICF) life prediction framework is proposed, which embodies a deformation mechanism based constitutive model and a thermomechanical damage model. The constitutive model is based on the decomposition of inelastic deformation into plasticity and creep mechanisms, which can describe both rate-independent and rate-dependent cyclic responses under wide strain rate and temperature conditions. The damage model takes into consideration of i) plasticity-induced fatigue, ii) intergranular embrittlement, iii) creep and iv) oxidation. Each damage form is formulated based on the respective physical mechanism/strain.
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