2004
DOI: 10.1002/adem.200400413
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Fatigue Strength of Heat‐treatable Steel Under Static Multiaxial Compression Stresses

Abstract: ty compared to pearlitic cast iron (EN-GJS-600±3). The cyclic deformation curves of ADI show in contrast to the behaviour of heat-treatable steels no cyclic strain softening. The fatigue crack growth behaviour of ADI is different in the threshold region and the Paris region compared to the pearlitic cast iron. The threshold value is lower, caused by the higher strength, but the fatigue crack growth resistance in the Paris region is higher. The fatigue behaviour of ADI is thus useful for safety-relevant compone… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The application of Eq. (16) to the uniaxial case results in a symmetrical Haigh diagram σ m -σ a , which contradicts the experimental results for most ductile steels [57,66]. Moreover, Crossland [35] demonstrated that mean compressive hydrostatic stresses benefited the torsional fatigue limit, and he proposed a linear function to model their effect.…”
Section: Extension Of the Crossland Methods To Take Into Account The Mmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The application of Eq. (16) to the uniaxial case results in a symmetrical Haigh diagram σ m -σ a , which contradicts the experimental results for most ductile steels [57,66]. Moreover, Crossland [35] demonstrated that mean compressive hydrostatic stresses benefited the torsional fatigue limit, and he proposed a linear function to model their effect.…”
Section: Extension Of the Crossland Methods To Take Into Account The Mmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Inner pressurizing of tube specimens intrinsically causes non-zero mean stresses. There are several cases where outer pressure is also applied [25], [26], but the pressure is not alternating. There is at least one case of another potentially interesting load combination using cruciform specimens [27], but the numbers of specimens used for each fatigue curve are not big enough.…”
Section: The Basic Test Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, these formulas come from empirical approaches to correlate groups of tests on particular materials. In the literature it is widely documented that there is no general empirical law to relate the effect of mean stress on the fatigue limit [3][4][5].…”
Section: Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%