4.6 Article

Low Cycle Fatigue Behavior of Plastically Pre-Strained HSLA S355MC and S460MC Steels

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15227927

Keywords

low cycle fatigue; plastic pre-straining; cyclic softening; fracture surface

Funding

  1. FASTCOLD project FAtigue STrength of COLD-formed structural steel details, through the RFCS program [SEP-210293473-(RFCS-2015-RFCSRPJ-707510)]

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The plastic deformation during cold roll forming can affect the fatigue performance of lightweight steel profiles, resulting in decreased fatigue resistance and ductility, as well as cyclic softening. Plastic pre-straining also reduces the transition life and fracture section of the materials.
Cold roll forming used in the manufacturing of lightweight steel profiles for racking storage systems is associated with localized, non-uniform plastic deformations in the corner sections of the profiles, which act as fatigue damage initiation sites. In order to obtain a clearer insight on the role of existing plastic deformation on material fatigue performance, the effect of plastic pre-straining on the low cycle fatigue behavior of S355MC and S460MC steels was investigated. The steels were plastically deformed at different pre-strain levels under tension, and subsequently subjected to cyclic strain-controlled testing. Plastic pre-straining was found to increase cyclic yield strength, decrease ductility, and induce cyclic softening, which, in S460MC, degrades fatigue resistance compared to the unstrained material. In unstrained conditions, the materials present a cyclic softening to hardening transition with increasing plastic strain amplitude, which in S355MC occurs at lower strain amplitudes and degrades its fatigue resistance with regard to the pre-strained material. Pre-straining also leads to a reduction in transition life from low to high cycle fatigue. SEM fractography, performed following the onset of crack initiation, revealed that plastic pre-straining reduces the fatigue fracture section as well as striation spacing, predominantly in the S355MC steel.

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