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In situ analysis of cracks in structural materials using synchrotron X-ray tomography and diffraction

In situ analysis of cracks in structural materials using synchrotron X-ray tomography and diffraction
In situ analysis of cracks in structural materials using synchrotron X-ray tomography and diffraction
The structural integrity and performance of many components and structures are dominated by cracks and hence the study of cracked bodies study is of major economical and social importance. Despite nearly 30 years of study, there is still no detailed consensus regarding either the fundamental parameters that drive cracks or the precise mechanisms of their growth in most materials. Thus, virtually all crack life prediction models currently in engineering use are largely phenomenological rather than physically based. Historically, a major hindrance to our understanding of crack initiation and propagation has been the inability to measure either the crack tip stresses or the crack morphology deep within materials. The development of very high-resolution strain and tomography mapping oil third generation synchrotron sources such as the ESRF has opened up the possibility of developing complementary techniques to monitor the entire plastic/process zone growth mechanisms and the accompanying crack tip field and crack wake field around growing cracks. If realized, such techniques would produce unique information that would be invaluable both in validating present finite element simulations of fatigue crack growth and in developing the future high accuracy simulations necessary For the development of physically realistic fatigue life-prediction models. Recent technique developments at the ESRF, Grenoble, opens up the possibility of imaging cracks and crack tip stress/strain fields, and the ability to study the extend of crack closure and overload effects, even under in situ loading. In this paper, first results from synchrotron X-ray diffraction and tomography experiments performed oil ID11 and ID19 (respectively) at the ESRF, Grenoble, are presented and discussed in comparison with predictions from finite element modeling.
tomography, cracks
0168-583X
217-225
Steuwer, A.
c6b6d6f0-3328-4097-982c-aa1873d70f1a
Edwards, L.
8abc28c8-6723-42e9-8252-f96ad472765d
Pratihar, S.
56c1a5fc-b598-44be-9e24-439bf3b3b486
Ganguly, S.
7dcbbc1a-a83a-4b19-a2b8-476b57f6c6f9
Peel, M.
03d4d59c-79a5-4b2e-8ac4-1f1efab8836f
Fitzpatrick, M.E.
26eb385f-4b65-4f9c-86fc-6c2464f9fc1e
Marrow, T.J.
2531e459-9fd9-43a3-baf9-6d4309c9c24d
Withers, P.J.
95b52224-f306-43a5-b75f-a2828b339f77
Sinclair, I.
6005f6c1-f478-434e-a52d-d310c18ade0d
Singh, K.D.
2b555378-706c-47d4-afa4-13934ef40706
Gao, N.
9c1370f7-f4a9-4109-8a3a-4089b3baec21
Buslaps, T.
30d69129-31e6-47a1-9d6a-ca9d00a6aad6
Buffière, J.-Y.
8f00077a-4870-4217-b3be-17f4f2a74269
Steuwer, A.
c6b6d6f0-3328-4097-982c-aa1873d70f1a
Edwards, L.
8abc28c8-6723-42e9-8252-f96ad472765d
Pratihar, S.
56c1a5fc-b598-44be-9e24-439bf3b3b486
Ganguly, S.
7dcbbc1a-a83a-4b19-a2b8-476b57f6c6f9
Peel, M.
03d4d59c-79a5-4b2e-8ac4-1f1efab8836f
Fitzpatrick, M.E.
26eb385f-4b65-4f9c-86fc-6c2464f9fc1e
Marrow, T.J.
2531e459-9fd9-43a3-baf9-6d4309c9c24d
Withers, P.J.
95b52224-f306-43a5-b75f-a2828b339f77
Sinclair, I.
6005f6c1-f478-434e-a52d-d310c18ade0d
Singh, K.D.
2b555378-706c-47d4-afa4-13934ef40706
Gao, N.
9c1370f7-f4a9-4109-8a3a-4089b3baec21
Buslaps, T.
30d69129-31e6-47a1-9d6a-ca9d00a6aad6
Buffière, J.-Y.
8f00077a-4870-4217-b3be-17f4f2a74269

Steuwer, A., Edwards, L., Pratihar, S., Ganguly, S., Peel, M., Fitzpatrick, M.E., Marrow, T.J., Withers, P.J., Sinclair, I., Singh, K.D., Gao, N., Buslaps, T. and Buffière, J.-Y. (2006) In situ analysis of cracks in structural materials using synchrotron X-ray tomography and diffraction. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms, 246 (1), 217-225. (doi:10.1016/j.nimb.2005.12.063).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The structural integrity and performance of many components and structures are dominated by cracks and hence the study of cracked bodies study is of major economical and social importance. Despite nearly 30 years of study, there is still no detailed consensus regarding either the fundamental parameters that drive cracks or the precise mechanisms of their growth in most materials. Thus, virtually all crack life prediction models currently in engineering use are largely phenomenological rather than physically based. Historically, a major hindrance to our understanding of crack initiation and propagation has been the inability to measure either the crack tip stresses or the crack morphology deep within materials. The development of very high-resolution strain and tomography mapping oil third generation synchrotron sources such as the ESRF has opened up the possibility of developing complementary techniques to monitor the entire plastic/process zone growth mechanisms and the accompanying crack tip field and crack wake field around growing cracks. If realized, such techniques would produce unique information that would be invaluable both in validating present finite element simulations of fatigue crack growth and in developing the future high accuracy simulations necessary For the development of physically realistic fatigue life-prediction models. Recent technique developments at the ESRF, Grenoble, opens up the possibility of imaging cracks and crack tip stress/strain fields, and the ability to study the extend of crack closure and overload effects, even under in situ loading. In this paper, first results from synchrotron X-ray diffraction and tomography experiments performed oil ID11 and ID19 (respectively) at the ESRF, Grenoble, are presented and discussed in comparison with predictions from finite element modeling.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Additional Information: Synchrotron Radiation and Materials Science: Proceedings of the E-MRS 2005 Symposium O on Synchrotron Radiation and Materials Science
Keywords: tomography, cracks
Organisations: Engineering Mats & Surface Engineerg Gp

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 43947
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/43947
ISSN: 0168-583X
PURE UUID: 56690048-ecd1-4c9f-8859-aad7792af4d5
ORCID for N. Gao: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7430-0319

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Feb 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:21

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Contributors

Author: A. Steuwer
Author: L. Edwards
Author: S. Pratihar
Author: S. Ganguly
Author: M. Peel
Author: M.E. Fitzpatrick
Author: T.J. Marrow
Author: P.J. Withers
Author: I. Sinclair
Author: K.D. Singh
Author: N. Gao ORCID iD
Author: T. Buslaps
Author: J.-Y. Buffière

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