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  2. Are the Cracks in Your Walls a Sign of a Serious Problem? - AOL

    www.aol.com/cracks-walls-sign-serious-problem...

    Diagonal cracks that run at a 45-degree angle can also indicate structural problems, and oftentimes they originate near a door, window, or in the corner of a wall. The crack may also be thicker on ...

  3. Striation (fatigue) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Striation_(fatigue)

    Scanning electron microscope image of fatigue striations produced from constant amplitude loading. The crack is growing from left to right. Striations are marks produced on the fracture surface that show the incremental growth of a fatigue crack. A striation marks the position of the crack tip at the time it was made.

  4. Fatigue (material) - Wikipedia

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

    Fatigue has traditionally been associated with the failure of metal components which led to the term metal fatigue. In the nineteenth century, the sudden failing of metal railway axles was thought to be caused by the metal crystallising because of the brittle appearance of the fracture surface, but this has since been disproved. [ 1 ]

  5. Intergranular fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intergranular_fracture

    Intergranular fracture can occur in a wide variety of materials, including steel alloys, copper alloys, aluminum alloys, and ceramics. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 3 ] In metals with multiple lattice orientations, when one lattice ends and another begins, the fracture changes direction to follow the new grain.

  6. Corrosion fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrosion_fatigue

    In true corrosion fatigue, the fatigue-crack-growth rate is enhanced by corrosion; this effect is seen in all three regions of the fatigue-crack growth-rate diagram. The diagram on the left is a schematic of crack-growth rate under true corrosion fatigue; the curve shifts to a lower stress-intensity-factor range in the corrosive environment.

  7. Stress corrosion cracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress_corrosion_cracking

    mild steel cracks in the presence of alkali (e.g. boiler cracking and caustic stress corrosion cracking) and nitrates; copper alloys crack in ammoniacal solutions (season cracking); high-tensile steels have been known to crack in an unexpectedly brittle manner in a whole variety of aqueous environments, especially when chlorides are present.

  8. Slip bands in metals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip_bands_in_metals

    PSB structure (adopted from [7]). Persistent slip-bands (PSBs) are associated with strain localisation due to fatigue in metals and cracking on the same plane. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and three-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD [8]) simulation were used to reveal and understand dislocations type and arrangement/patterns to relate it to the sub-surface structure.

  9. White etching cracks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_etching_cracks

    White etching cracks (WEC), or white structure flaking or brittle flaking, is a type of rolling contact fatigue (RCF) damage that can occur in bearing steels under certain conditions, such as hydrogen embrittlement, high stress, inadequate lubrication, and high temperature. WEC is characterised by the presence of white areas of microstructural ...