4.5 Article

Microstructural Impact on Fatigue Crack Growth Behavior of Alloy 718

Journal

METALS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/met12050710

Keywords

alloy 718; threshold value; threshold of stress intensity factor range; fracture surface; microstructure

Funding

  1. Technology and Innovation Funding Program of the Austrian Federal Ministries for Climate Action, Environment, Energy, Mobility, Innovation and Technology (BMK) [867403]

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This study investigates the effect of microstructures of Alloy 718 on the threshold of stress intensity factor range, and draws conclusions through a series of experiments. Different processing steps are tailored to achieve specific mechanical and microstructural properties in the final product.
Alloy 718 for forged parts can form a wide range of microstructures through a variety of thermo-mechanical processes, depending on the number of remelting processes, temperature and holding time of homogenization annealing, cogging and the number of forging steps depending on the forming characteristics. In industrial practice, these processing steps are tailored to achieve specific mechanical and microstructural properties in the final product. In the present work, we investigate the dependence of the threshold of stress intensity factor range Delta K-th on associated microstructural elements, namely grain size and distribution. For this purpose, a series of tests with different starting microstructures were performed at the falling stress intensity factor range, Delta K, and a load ratio of R = 0.1 to evaluate the different threshold values. Fracture initiation and crack propagation were analyzed afterward using scanning electron microscopy of the resulting fracture surfaces. In order to obtain comparable initial conditions, all specimens were brought to the same strength level by means of a two-stage aging heat treatment. In the future, this knowledge shall be used in the context of simulation-aided product development for estimating local fatigue crack propagation properties of simulated microstructures obtained from forging and heat treatment modeling.

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