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INITIATION AND GROWTH OF SMALL CRACKS IN DIRECTIONALLY SOLIDIFIED MAR‐M247 UNDER CREEP‐FATIGUE PART II: EFFECT OF ANGLE NETWEEN STRESS AXIS AND SOLIDIFICATION DIRECTION
Author(s) -
Okada M,
Tsutsumi M,
Kitamura T,
Ohtani R
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
fatigue and fracture of engineering materials and structures
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1460-2695
pISSN - 8756-758X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-2695.1998.00454.x
Subject(s) - materials science , grain boundary , creep , perpendicular , directional solidification , nucleation , superalloy , coalescence (physics) , composite material , dendrite (mathematics) , metallurgy , intergranular corrosion , anisotropy , stress concentration , crack closure , fracture mechanics , microstructure , geometry , mathematics , chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , astrobiology
This paper deals with the effect of anisotropy on fracture processes of a directionally solidified superalloy, Mar‐M247, under a push–pull creep‐fatigue condition at high‐temperature. Three kinds of specimen were cut from a cast plate such that their axes possess angles of 0°, 45° and 90° with respect to the 〈001〉 orientation that is aligned parallel to the solidification direction (also to the grain boundaries and primary dendrite axis); these specimens being denoted the 0° specimen, the 45° specimen, and the 90° specimen, respectively. The tests were conducted at 1273 K (1000 °C) in air under equal magnitudes of the range of a Δ J ‐related parameter, Δ W c  , which represents the driving force for crack growth in creep‐fatigue. Although the grain boundaries are macroscopically parallel to the solidification direction, they are wavy or serrated microscopically. Small cracks nucleate along parts of the grain boundaries perpendicular to the stress axis in all specimens. The 90° specimen has the shortest crack initiation life and the 0° specimen has the longest. In the 90° and 45° specimens, intergranular cracks continue to nucleate and a main crack is formed along the grain boundary due to the frequent coalescence of small cracks. In the 0° specimen, cracks grow into the grain, and transgranular cracks coalesce along the primary dendrite or grain boundary. The 0° specimen exhibits the slowest crack growth rate and the 90° specimen the fastest. These differences in the initiation and growth behaviour of small cracks cause the longest failure life in the 0° specimen and the shortest in the 90° specimen.

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