Fatigue Strength Assessment of Friction Welds under Consideration of Residual Stress
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To further investigate the fatigue strength of friction welded joints.
- To determine the influence of residual stress on the fatigue strength.
- To propose a first iteration of a fatigue assessment approach for friction-welded joints with an appropriate safety factor.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Friction Welding
2.2. Friction Welding Simulation
2.3. Hardness and Residual-Stress Measurements
2.4. Fatigue Testing
3. Results
3.1. Characterisation of the Welded Specimens
3.2. Welding and Residual-Stress Simulation
3.3. Residual Stress Measurements
3.4. Fatigue Strength Evaluation
3.4.1. Axial Testing Results
3.4.2. Torsional Testing Results
3.4.3. Summary of Testing
- Failure due to the weld flash base notches;
- Nominal section failure in the base metal or heat-affected zone.
3.5. Assessment Approach
- 3.
- Estimate the base fatigue strength of the material.
- 4.
- Derive a local endurable stress amplitude (at R = −1, N = 106, psurv = 97.5%) via a support effect calculation including local stress gradient, notch sharpness, roughness, base material strength, and surface factors.
- 5.
- Scale the local endurable-stress amplitude to a different R-ratio for residual stress-influence consideration.
- 6.
- Calculate endurable nominal-stress range from the endurable local-stress amplitude.
- 7.
- Construct the design curve from the endurable stress range and the slope.
3.5.1. Calculation of the Local Material Strength
3.5.2. Influence of Residual Stress
3.5.3. Constructing the S-N Curve
3.5.4. Estimation Results
4. Discussion
- The surface roughness was specified for specimen preparation and therefore assumed to be RZ = 6.3 µm in the calculation. No further measurements on the roughness were conducted, due to poor accessibility at the flash base notch. Therefore, lower actual roughness could have improved the tested fatigue strength.
- The estimation of the local tensile strength based on hardness measurements might involve inaccuracies, affecting further calculations.
- Regarding the influence of residual stress on the fatigue strength, the calculation is likely limited by not considering residual stress relaxation. In reality, the mechanisms for residual stress relaxation are very complex, especially under cyclic loading. Nevertheless, the FKM guideline already approximates the trends in axial strength well.
5. Conclusions
- The experimental and numerical determination of residual stress has shown that compressive residual stress is found in the failure-critical area of the flash base notch. Tensile residual stress is present on the inside of the specimen. Adding to surface-sensitive measurements, the numerical analysis can provide information on the global residual-stress distribution.
- Fatigue testing under torsional and axial load confirmed the high fatigue strength of friction-welded joints, known from the literature. In this regard, the S-N curves generally exhibited a flat slope and low scatter.
- An approach based on the FKM guideline is suitable for providing a conservative fatigue assessment for friction-welded joints, taking into account local geometry, strength, and residual stress. Key changes have to be made to the slope of the S-N curve: kσ,RFW = 10 for axial load and kτ,RFW = 15 for shear load.
- The influence of residual stress on the fatigue of friction-welded joints was determined to depend on the load case. In this regard, the presence of residual stress was found to have a positive impact under axial loading, while reducing the strength in torsion.
- In the case of the presented joints, the hardness at the failure-critical location, the flash base notch, is increased by the process. The locally increased hardness increases the overall fatigue strength of the part, even outweighing the detrimental effects of residual stress in torsion.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
Symbol | Unit | Description |
AW | Specimens in the as-welded state | |
FAT | Classification reference to the endurable stress range, according to [35] | |
GMAW | Gas metal arc welding | |
SR | Specimens that have been stress-relieved after welding | |
Pre-SR | Specimens that have been stress-relieved prior to welding | |
BM | Base metal | |
HAZ | Heat-affected zone | |
TMAZ | Thermo-mechanically affected zone | |
WCZ | Weld centre zone | |
Dwelded | mm | Welded diameter at the weld interface |
f | 1/s | Frequency of the fatigue test |
Gσ | MPa/mm | Referenced stress gradient according to the FKM guideline |
KAK (KAK,σ or KAK,τ) | - - | Mean stress factor according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
KWK (KWK,σ or KWK,τ) | - - | Construction factor according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
Kf | - | Estimated notch factor according to the FKM guideline |
KR | - | Roughness factor according to the FKM guideline |
Kt | - | Stress concentration factor according to the FKM guideline |
k | - | Slope of the S-N Curve |
kσ kτ | - - | Slope of the S-N curve according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
kσ,RFW kτ,RFW | - - | Proposed slope of the S-N curve for friction-welded joints, normal or shear stress |
N | - | Number of cycles in the fatigue test |
n | - | Support effect number according to the FKM guideline |
psurv | - | Survival probability |
R | - | Stress ratio |
Rm | MPa | Ultimate tensile strength |
Rp0.2 | MPa | Yield strength |
RZ | µm | Surface roughness parameter |
Δs | mm | Distance from the neighbouring point to the surface according to the FKM guideline |
δσ | MPa | Stress delta between the surface and the neighbouring point according to the FKM guideline |
σmax | MPa | Maximum stress at the surface according to the FKM guideline |
σresidual | MPa | Residual stress |
σw τw | MPa MPa | Endurable stress amplitude of the material at N = 106 according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
σWK τWK | MPa MPa | Local endurable-stress amplitude at N = 106 according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
σAK τAK | MPa MPa | Local endurable-stress amplitude for differing stress ratio at N = 106 according to the FKM guideline, normal or shear stress |
σresidual,stable | MPa | Estimated stable residual-stress level after the first cycle |
σm τm | MPa MPa | Mean stress, normal or shear stress |
Δσ Δτ | MPa MPa | Stress range, normal or shear stress |
ΔσAW, ΔσSR ΔτAW, ΔτSR | MPa MPa | Experimentally measured fatigue strength for differing specimen and load conditions |
Δσconcept | MPa | Endurable nominal-stress range at N = 106 |
Δσconcept, 50% Δτconcept, 50% | MPa MPa | Calculated fatigue strength at N = 106, 50% survival probability, normal or shear stress |
ΔσN = 2×10^6, 97.5% ΔτN = 2×10^6, 97.5% | MPa MPa | Calculated fatigue strength at N = 2 × 106, 97.5% survival probability, normal or shear stress |
1:Ts | - | Scatter of the S-N curve |
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Element | C | Si | Mn | P | S | Cr | Mo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
wt. % | 0.169 | 0.173 | 1.206 | 0.011 | 0.026 | 0.106 | 0.019 |
Ni | Al | Nb | Ti | V | Cu | N | |
0.044 | 0.015 | 0.0038 | 0.015 | 0.0037 | 0.133 | 0.013 |
Contact Phase | Friction Pressure | Burn-Off Length | Rotational Speed | Forging Pressure | Forging Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.5 s | 80 MPa | 6 mm | 1900 min−1 | 160 MPa | 5 s |
Notch | Nominal Section | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Torsion | Axial | Torsion | Axial | ||
SR | Stress concentration factor Kt | 1.30 | 1.78 | 1 | 1 |
Hardness HV10 | 143 | 149 | 135 | ||
Δσconcept, 50% or Δτconcept, 50% in MPa | 260.3 | 325.5 | 281.9 | 441.3 | |
Fatigue test result in MPa | 330 | 358 | 330 | - | |
AW | Stress concentration factor Kt | 1.35 | 1.89 | 1 | 1 |
Hardness HV10 | 167 | 139 | |||
σresidual,stable in MPa | −51.7 | −91.5 | −58.9 | −122.5 | |
Hypothetical: Δσconcept, 50% or Δτconcept, 50% with no residual stress in MPa | 292.2 | 359.3 | 289.7 | 453.3 | |
Δσconcept, 50% or Δτconcept, 50% in MPa | 287.6 | 369.7 | 285.2 | 470.3 | |
Fatigue test result in MPa | 366 | 461 | 366 | - | |
Conservative estimation | yes | yes | yes | no data |
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Uhlenberg, L.; Baumgartner, J.; Rößler, C.; Schmicker, D.; Köhler, M.; Trommer, F.; Dilger, K. Fatigue Strength Assessment of Friction Welds under Consideration of Residual Stress. Materials 2024, 17, 3130. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133130
Uhlenberg L, Baumgartner J, Rößler C, Schmicker D, Köhler M, Trommer F, Dilger K. Fatigue Strength Assessment of Friction Welds under Consideration of Residual Stress. Materials. 2024; 17(13):3130. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133130
Chicago/Turabian StyleUhlenberg, Lorenz, Jörg Baumgartner, Christoph Rößler, David Schmicker, Markus Köhler, Frank Trommer, and Klaus Dilger. 2024. "Fatigue Strength Assessment of Friction Welds under Consideration of Residual Stress" Materials 17, no. 13: 3130. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133130
APA StyleUhlenberg, L., Baumgartner, J., Rößler, C., Schmicker, D., Köhler, M., Trommer, F., & Dilger, K. (2024). Fatigue Strength Assessment of Friction Welds under Consideration of Residual Stress. Materials, 17(13), 3130. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133130