Fatigue Failure in Engineered Components and How It Can Be Eliminated: Case Studies on the Influence of Bifilms
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Bifilms: The Pre-Existing Cracks in Our Engineered Components
4. Bifilms and Fatigue Crack Initiation and Propagation
- Fatigue crack initiation has to be attributed to the pre-existing cracks, bifilms, due to damage to the liquid metal. There is now growing evidence for this from in situ studies. Pores are only the visible parts of the damage, being the inflated regions of some bifilms. Pores assist their surrounding regions of bifilm, and nearby bifilms, to open up at low stresses by serving as stress concentrators.
- Fatigue crack propagation often appears to be dominated by secondary cracks and/or other cracks opening up and later coalescing. Hence, the fatigue crack propagation data contain the extrinsic effect of bifilms.
- The size of bifilms can be much larger than the fatigue specimens.
5. Case Studies on In-Service Fatigue Failure Due to Bifilms
5.1. Case 1: Fatigue Failure of a Turbine Blade
5.2. Case 2: Fatigue Failure of Steel Helicopter Components
5.3. Case 3: Fatigue Failure of Magnesium Helicopter Housings
5.4. Case 4: Fatigue Failure of the Cylinder Head of an Airplane Engine
5.5. Case 5: Fatigue Failure in Aluminium Airplane Frame Castings
6. Conclusions
- Naturally, although instances can be quoted in which a failure can be 100% attributed to the progress of a fatigue crack, this is far from the examples presented in this report and may be limited to the fatigue of laboratory test pieces.
- Studies of the fatigue of laboratory test pieces will always be of interest, but will be of little value to the lifetime predictions of engineering components if the engineering components contain the currently normal populations of bifilm defects from the casting process.
- In the instances quoted in this report, which appear to be typical of a large proportion of fatigue failures of components of rotating machinery, the overwhelming contributors to the failure are bifilms generated in the inappropriate casting technique despite appropriate casting techniques now being available [22,44]. The fatigue contribution to failure is relegated to the small regions of the component crack path which happen to be absent of bifilms. A prior study [38] found bifilm defects to be responsible for up to 99% of the ‘fatigue’ failure of a wind turbine main bearing. From this study, the bifilm contribution to the ‘fatigue’ failure of the turbine appeared to be somewhere in the region of 50 to 90%. The bifilm contribution for the ‘fatigue’ failure of the helicopter drive shaft cannot be discerned from the accident investigation report, but would be expected to be in the region of at least 10 to 50%.
- It seems bifilm cracks and fatigue processes are both necessary for complete failure by what we generally call ‘a fatigue failure’. It appears probable that elimination of bifilms would eliminate most in-service fatigue failures.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Campbell, J.; Tiryakioğlu, M. Fatigue Failure in Engineered Components and How It Can Be Eliminated: Case Studies on the Influence of Bifilms. Metals 2022, 12, 1320. https://doi.org/10.3390/met12081320
Campbell J, Tiryakioğlu M. Fatigue Failure in Engineered Components and How It Can Be Eliminated: Case Studies on the Influence of Bifilms. Metals. 2022; 12(8):1320. https://doi.org/10.3390/met12081320
Chicago/Turabian StyleCampbell, John, and Murat Tiryakioğlu. 2022. "Fatigue Failure in Engineered Components and How It Can Be Eliminated: Case Studies on the Influence of Bifilms" Metals 12, no. 8: 1320. https://doi.org/10.3390/met12081320
APA StyleCampbell, J., & Tiryakioğlu, M. (2022). Fatigue Failure in Engineered Components and How It Can Be Eliminated: Case Studies on the Influence of Bifilms. Metals, 12(8), 1320. https://doi.org/10.3390/met12081320