
A crack growth equation is used for calculating the size of a
fatigue
Fatigue describes a state of tiredness that does not resolve with rest or sleep. In general usage, fatigue is synonymous with extreme tiredness or exhaustion that normally follows prolonged physical or mental activity. When it does not resolve ...
crack growing from cyclic loads. The growth of fatigue cracks can result in catastrophic failure, particularly in the case of aircraft. A crack growth equation can be used to ensure safety, both in the design phase and during operation, by predicting the size of cracks. In critical structure, loads can be recorded and used to predict the size of cracks to ensure maintenance or retirement occurs prior to any of the cracks failing.
''Fatigue life'' can be divided into an initiation period and a crack growth period. Crack growth equations are used to predict the crack size starting from a given initial flaw and are typically based on experimental data obtained from constant amplitude
fatigue tests.
One of the earliest crack growth equations based on the
stress intensity factor range of a load cycle (
) is the
Paris–Erdogan equation[.]
:
where
is the crack length and
is the fatigue crack growth for a single load cycle
. A variety of crack growth equations similar to the Paris–Erdogan equation have been developed to include factors that affect the crack growth rate such as stress ratio, overloads and load history effects.
The stress intensity range can be calculated from the maximum and minimum stress intensity for a cycle
:
A ''geometry factor''
is used to relate the far field stress
to the crack tip stress intensity using
:
.
There are standard references containing the geometry factors for many different configurations.
History of crack propagation equations
Many crack propagation equations have been proposed over the years to improve prediction accuracy and incorporate a variety of effects. The works of Head, Frost and Dugdale, McEvily and Illg, and Liu on fatigue crack-growth behaviour laid the foundation in this topic. The general form of these crack propagation equations may be expressed as
:
where, the crack length is denoted by
, the number of cycles of load applied is given by
, the stress range by
, and the material parameters by
. For symmetrical configurations, the length of the crack from the line of symmetry is defined as
and is half of the total crack length
.
Crack growth equations of the form
are not a true
differential equation as they do not model the process of crack growth in a continuous manner throughout the loading cycle. As such, separate cycle counting or identification algorithms such as the commonly used
rainflow-counting algorithm, are required to identify the maximum and minimum values in a cycle. Although developed for the stress/strain-life methods rainflow counting has also been shown to work for crack growth. There have been a small number of true derivative fatigue crack growth equations that have also been developed.
Factors affecting crack growth rate
Regimes
Figure 1 shows a typical plot of the rate of crack growth as a function of the alternating stress intensity or crack tip driving force
plotted on log scales. The crack growth rate behaviour with respect to the alternating stress intensity can be explained in different regimes (see, figure 1) as follows
Regime A: At low growth rates, variations in
microstructure, mean stress (or load ratio), and environment have significant effects on the crack propagation rates. It is observed at low load ratios that the growth rate is most sensitive to microstructure and in low strength materials it is most sensitive to load ratio.
Regime B: At mid-range of growth rates, variations in microstructure, mean stress (or load ratio), thickness, and environment have no significant effects on the crack propagation rates.
Regime C: At high growth rates, crack propagation is highly sensitive to the variations in microstructure, mean stress (or load ratio), and thickness. Environmental effects have relatively very less influence.
Stress ratio effect
Cycles with higher stress ratio
have an increased rate of crack growth. This effect is often explained using the
crack closure concept which describes the observation that the crack faces can remain in contact with each other at loads above zero. This reduces the effective stress intensity factor range and the fatigue crack growth rate.
Sequence effects
A
equation gives the rate of growth for a single cycle, but when the loading is not constant amplitude, changes in the loading can lead to temporary increases or decreases in the rate of growth. Additional equations have been developed to deal with some of these cases. The rate of growth is retarded when an overload occurs in a loading sequence. These loads generate are plastic zone that may delay the rate of growth. Two notable equations for modelling the delays occurring while the crack grows through the overload region are:
; The Wheeler model (1972)
:
with
where
is the plastic zone corresponding to the ith cycle that occurs post the overload and
is the distance between the crack and the extent of the plastic zone at the overload.
; The Willenborg model
Crack growth equations
Threshold equation
To predict the crack growth rate at the near threshold region, the following relation has been used
:
Paris–Erdoğan equation
To predict the crack growth rate in the intermediate regime, the Paris–Erdoğan equation is used
:
Forman equation
In 1967, Forman proposed the following relation to account for the increased growth rates due to stress ratio and when approaching the
fracture toughness
In materials science, fracture toughness is the critical stress intensity factor of a sharp crack where propagation of the crack suddenly becomes rapid and unlimited. A component's thickness affects the constraint conditions at the tip of a c ...
:
McEvily–Groeger equation
McEvily and Groeger proposed the following power-law relationship which considers the effects of both high and low values of
: