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Environmental fatigue of an Al-Li-Cu alloy. Part 2: Microscopic hydrogen cracking processesBased on a fractographic analysis of fatigue crack propagation (FCP) in Al-Li-Cu alloy 2090 stressed in a variety of inert and embrittling environments, microscopic crack paths are identified and correlated with intrinsic da/dN-delta K kinetics. FCP rates in 2090 are accelerated by hydrogen producing environments (pure water vapor, moist air, and aqueous NaCl), as defined in Part 1. For these cases, subgrain boundary fatigue cracking (SGC) dominates for delta K values where the crack tip process zone, a significant fraction of the cyclic plastic zone, is sufficiently large to envelop 5 micron subgrains in the unrecrystallized microstructure. SGC may be due to strong hydrogen trapping at T1 precipitates concentrated at sub-boundaries. At low delta K, the plastic zone diameter is smaller than the subgrain size and FCP progresses along (100) planes due to either local lattice decohesion or aluminum-lithium hydride cracking. For inert environments (vacuum, helium, and oxygen), or at high delta K where the hydrogen effect on da/dN is small, FCP is along (111) slip planes; this mode does not transition with increasing delta K and plastic zone size. The SGC and (100) crystallographic cracking modes, and the governing influence of the crack tip process zone volume (delta K), support hydrogen embrittlement rather than a surface film rupture and anodic dissolution mechanism for environmental FCP. Multi-sloped log da/dN-log delta K behavior is produced by changes in process zone hydrogen-microstructure interactions, and not by purely micromechanical-microstructure interactions, in contradiction to microstructural distance-based fatigue models.
Document ID
19920021970
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Robert S Piascik
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Richard P Gangloff
(University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 1992
Subject Category
Structural Mechanics
Report/Patent Number
NASA-TM-107620
NAS 1.15:107620
Report Number: NASA-TM-107620
Report Number: NAS 1.15:107620
Accession Number
92N31214
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 505-63-50-04
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG1-745
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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