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  2. Fatigue (material) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatigue_(material)

    Fatigue life scatter tends to increase for longer fatigue lives. Damage is irreversible. Materials do not recover when rested. Fatigue life is influenced by a variety of factors, such as temperature, surface finish, metallurgical microstructure, presence of oxidizing or inert chemicals, residual stresses, scuffing contact , etc.

  3. Vibration fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibration_fatigue

    Vibration fatigue is a mechanical engineering term describing material fatigue, caused by forced vibration of random nature. An excited structure responds according to its natural-dynamics modes, which results in a dynamic stress load in the material points. [ 1 ]

  4. Goodman relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodman_relation

    Within the branch of materials science known as material failure theory, the Goodman relation (also called a Goodman diagram, a Goodman-Haigh diagram, a Haigh diagram or a Haigh-Soderberg diagram) is an equation used to quantify the interaction of mean and alternating stresses on the fatigue life of a material. [1]

  5. Low-cycle fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-cycle_fatigue

    2N is the number of reversals to failure (N cycles); ε f ' is an empirical constant known as the fatigue ductility coefficient defined by the strain intercept at 2N =1; c is an empirical constant known as the fatigue ductility exponent, commonly ranging from -0.5 to -0.7. Small c results in long fatigue life.

  6. Fatigue limit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatigue_limit

    The fatigue limit or endurance limit is the stress level below which an infinite number of loading cycles can be applied to a material without causing fatigue failure. [1] Some metals such as ferrous alloys and titanium alloys have a distinct limit, [ 2 ] whereas others such as aluminium and copper do not and will eventually fail even from ...

  7. Thermo-mechanical fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermo-Mechanical_Fatigue

    There are three mechanisms acting in thermo-mechanical fatigue Creep is the flow of material at high temperatures; Fatigue is crack growth and propagation due to repeated loading; Oxidation is a change in the chemical composition of the material due to environmental factors. The oxidized material is more brittle and prone to crack creation.

  8. Paris' law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris'_law

    The material coefficients and are obtained experimentally and also depend on environment, frequency, temperature and stress ratio. [2] The stress intensity factor range has been found to correlate the rate of crack growth from a variety of different conditions and is the difference between the maximum and minimum stress intensity factors in a ...

  9. Bauschinger effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauschinger_effect

    The Bauschinger effect refers to a property of materials where the material's stress/strain characteristics change as a result of the microscopic stress distribution of the material. For example, an increase in tensile yield strength occurs at the expense of compressive yield strength. The effect is named after German engineer Johann ...