steel structures 3-03 Flashcards

1
Q

what is cleavage fracture?

A

Failure mechanism in which in consequence of local loading a micro crack arises because
the cleavage fracture stress is exceeded due to a pile-up of dislocations at barriers such
as grain boundaries or non-metallic inclusions.

  • material separation ┴ to the largest principal
    normal stress along the crystal planes with low
    packing density
  • the separation takes place transgranular at the
    atomic level, or intergranular along the grain boundaries
  • low deformation before fracture (no necking)
  • planar, macroscopically shiny
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1
Q

fractures due to mechanical load:

A

overload failure: single overloading
-sliding fracture
-cleavage fracture

fatigue failure: repeated loading

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2
Q

what is sliding fracture?

A

Fracture mechanism in which pores are formed as a result of local
capabilities for plastic deformation. The pores grow under further loading
and finally unify at failure.

  • large deformations in the micrometer range before breaking
  • dimple-like fracture surface; macroscopically matt
  • microscopically ductile; (macroscopically does not need to be a ductile failure)
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3
Q

name the 3 phases or microscopic phenomena of ductile fracture:

A

1-. blistering / pore formation at the point of the
greatest necking
2-. void expansion: concentration of individual pores
in the center of specimen; formation of
microcracks
3-. merging (coalescence) of the microcracks / voids
and crack propagation to the surface of the
specimen in the direction of principal stresses

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4
Q

conditions supporting brittle fracture:

A

-structural design: restraint and stress triaxiality due to notches, abrupt transitions (change in stiffness), large wall thicknesses.
-production: surface defects, inhomogeneous structure and cracks due to welding, grinding, hardening by thermal cutting; cold-forming; insufficient steel toughness.
-loading conditions: high loading rate (e.g. impact forces); multiaxial state of stress (tension-tension); cyclic loading
-surrounding conditions: low temperature, corrosive media → stress corrosion cracking, ionising radiation → neutron embrittlement
-microstructure: coarse grained structure, grain boundary precipitates, non-metallic inclusions; high nitrogen content (aging), micro-structural changes.

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5
Q

thick components - more brittle fracture

A
  • increase in residual stresses from the welding process due to greater
    stiffness of the component
  • plane state of stress (thin components) plane state of strain (thick components: triaxial stress state)
  • increase in cooling rate during welding (formation of martensite)
  • increase in metallurgical difficulties (inhomogeneity of the material)
  • uneven distribution of the toughness throughout the product thickness:
    • relatively uniform: normalized and heat-rolled
      plates
    • non-uniform: incompletely hardened water-
      quenched and tempered plates (fy > 620 MPa) and
      plates in as-rolled condition with t > 100 mm
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6
Q

what test is used for evaluation of brittle fracture behavior?

A

notched-bar impact-bending test/ chary impact test

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7
Q

name two types of cracks in welded joints:

A

-lamellar fracture
-hydrogen cracking

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8
Q
A
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