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Low-cycle fatigue of two austenitic alloys in hydrogen gas and air at elevated temperaturesThe low-cycle fatigue resistance of type 347 stainless steel and Hastelloy Alloy X was evaluated in constant-amplitude, strain-controlled fatigue tests conducted under continuous negative strain cycling at a constant strain rate of 0.001 per sec and at total axial strain ranges of 1.5, 3.0, and 5.0 percent in both hydrogen gas and laboratory air environments in the temperature range 538-871 C. Elevated-temperature, compressive-strain hold-time experiments were also conducted. In hydrogen, the cyclic stress-strain behavior of both materials at 538 C was characterized by appreciable cyclic hardening at all strain ranges. At 871 C neither material hardened significantly; in fact, at 5% strain range 347 steel showed continuous cyclic softening until failure. The fatigue resistance of 347 steel was slightly higher than that of Alloy X at all temperatures and strain ranges. Ten-minute compressive hold time experiments at 760 and 871 C resulted in increased fatigue lives for 347 steel and decreased fatigue lives for Alloy X. Both alloys showed slightly lower fatigue resistance in air than in hydrogen. Some fractographic and metallographic results are also given.
Document ID
19770064192
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Jaske, C. E.
(Battelle Columbus Labs. OH, United States)
Rice, R. C.
(Battelle Columbus Laboratories Columbus, Ohio, United States)
Date Acquired
August 9, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1976
Subject Category
Metallic Materials
Meeting Information
Meeting: Symposium on Creep-Fatigue Interaction
Location: New York, NY
Start Date: December 5, 1976
End Date: December 10, 1976
Accession Number
77A47044
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-20078
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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