IMPLICATIONS OF SURFACE FINISH AND SUB-SURFACE POROSITY ON COMPONENT
LIFE PREDICTION
Abstract
High duty engineering component life is usually demonstrated through
extensive testing and statistical analysis applied to empirical
curve-fit equations. Because of this, the extent of the testing required
is huge and costly: it must consider the load cycle range and test to
high numbers of cycles. Furthermore, this testing must be repeated for
every material, method of manufacture, and subsequent post-processing.
Additive Manufacturing (AM) for high duty components has brought to the
fore the question of the effect of porosity and surface roughness on
fatigue life. Because there is relatively little service life
experience, it is possible that the testing approach could also fail to
represent conservatively the true life of a critical component. The
authors propose the development of a fatigue model based on
well-established engineering physics principles, by creating
computational specimens with modelled surface roughness and porosity,
and subjected to cyclic loading using Finite Element Analysis. They show
that the combination of roughness features and sub-surface pores leads
to an equivalent plastic strain distribution pattern that suggests an
emergent physical process. Such a phenomenological understanding of the
fatigue failure process should lead to improved life prediction
techniques, more cost effective test procedures, and the development of
better AM methods.