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  2. Fatigue (material) - Wikipedia

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

    With body-centered cubic materials (bcc), the Wöhler curve often becomes a horizontal line with decreasing stress amplitude, i.e. there is a fatigue strength that can be assigned to these materials. With face-centered cubic metals (fcc), the Wöhler curve generally drops continuously, so that only a fatigue limit can be assigned to these ...

  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. Thermo-mechanical fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermo-Mechanical_Fatigue

    Fatigue alone is the driving cause of failure in this case, causing the material to fail before oxidation can have much of an effect. [1] TMF still is not fully understood. There are many different models to attempt to predict the behavior and life of materials undergoing TMF loading. The two models presented below take different approaches.

  5. 10 Possible Causes of Fatigue — and How to Resolve Them

    www.aol.com/news/10-possible-causes-fatigue...

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  6. Low-cycle fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-cycle_fatigue

    Low cycle fatigue (LCF) has two fundamental characteristics: plastic deformation in each cycle; and low cycle phenomenon, in which the materials have finite endurance for this type of load. The term cycle refers to repeated applications of stress that lead to eventual fatigue and failure; low-cycle pertains to a long period between applications.

  7. Material handling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_handling

    Material handling is integral to the design of most production systems since the efficient flow of material between the activities of a production system is heavily dependent on the arrangement (or layout) of the activities. If two activities are adjacent to each other, then material might easily be handed from one activity to another.

  8. Failure cause - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Failure_cause

    They include corrosion, welding of contacts due to an abnormal electric current, return spring fatigue failure, unintended command failure, dust accumulation and blockage of mechanism, etc. Seldom only one cause (hazard) can be identified that creates system failures. The real root causes can in theory in most cases be traced back to some kind ...

  9. Static fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_fatigue

    With static fatigue materials experience damage or failure under stress levels that are lower than their normal ultimate tensile strengths. [2] The exact details vary with the material type and environmental factors, such as moisture presence [3] and temperature. [4] [5] This phenomenon is closely related to stress corrosion cracking. [1]