Plastic slip and early stage of fatigue damage in polycrystals: Comparison between experiments and crystal plasticity finite elements simulations

Loïc Signor, Emmanuel Lacoste, Patrick Villechaise, Thomas Ghidossi, Stephan Courtin

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

For conventional materials with solid solution, fatigue damage is often related to microplasticity and is largely sensitive to microstructure at different scales concerning dislocations, grains and textures. The present study focuses on slip bands activity and fatigue crack initiation with special attention on the influence of the size, the morphology and the crystal orientation of grains and their neighbours. The local configurations which favour-or prevent-crack initiation are not completely identified. In this work, the identification and the analysis of several crack initiation sites are performed using Scanning Electron Microscopy and Electron Back-Scattered Diffraction. Crystal plasticity finite elements simulation is employed to evaluate local microplasticity at the scale of the grains. One of the originality of this work is the creation of 3D meshes of polycrystalline aggregates corresponding to zones where fatigue cracks have been observed. 3D data obtained by serial-sectioning are used to reconstruct actual microstructure. The role of the plastic slip activity as a driving force for fatigue crack initiation is discussed according to the comparison between experimental observations and simulations. The approach is applied to 316L type austenitic stainless steels under low-cycle fatigue loading.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication11th International Fatigue Congress
PublisherTrans Tech Publications
Pages1711-1716
Number of pages6
ISBN (Print)9783038350088
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2014
Externally publishedYes
Event11th International Fatigue Congress, FATIGUE 2014 - Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Duration: 2 Mar 20147 Mar 2014

Publication series

NameAdvanced Materials Research
Volume891-892
ISSN (Print)1022-6680

Conference

Conference11th International Fatigue Congress, FATIGUE 2014
Country/TerritoryAustralia
CityMelbourne, VIC
Period2/03/147/03/14

Keywords

  • 316L Austenitic stainless steel
  • 3D EBSD
  • Crystal plasticity
  • Fatigue crack initiation

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