4.7 Article

Effect of corrosion severity on fatigue evolution in Al-Zn-Mg-Cu

Journal

CORROSION SCIENCE
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 498-508

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.corsci.2009.10.006

Keywords

Aluminum; Modelling studies; Corrosion fatigue; Pitting corrosion; Exfoliation corrosion

Funding

  1. Aeronautical Systems Center, Aging Aircraft Systems Squadron under Air Force [F09650-03-D-0001]
  2. National Institute for Aerospace
  3. United States Air Force
  4. General Dynamics Information Technology [USAF-5212-STI-SC-0040]
  5. The Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems Industrial Associates Program

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The effect of existing-localized corrosion on fatigue cracking of 7075-T6511 was established using crack surface marker-band analysis and a fracture mechanics model. The substantial reduction of fatigue life due to EXCO solution L-S surface pre-corrosion is nearly independent of exposure time after initial-sharp degradation, scaling with the evolution of pit-cluster size and initial stress intensity range with exposure time. Independent of exposure time, formation of a resolvable fatigue crack (similar to 10 mu m) accounts for a similar-low (similar to 5%) fraction of total fatigue life at low stress range (sigma(max) = 150 MPa, R = 0.1). Crack formation occurs at microscopic protrusions into the corroded volume. A corrosion-modified-equivalent initial flaw size (CM-EIFS); predicted with the AFGROW tool using measured initial aspect ratio, initiation cycles, and total fatigue life inputs; accurately represents the corrosion damage effect on fatigue for a range of exposures. The similar deleterious effect of several corroding environments for various-exposed surfaces is described by a lower-bound CM-EIFS with a 300 mu m depth and 1200 mu m surface length suggesting fatigue is governed by a microscopic pit-based topography. Either an approximate lower-bound, or specific CM-EIFS calibrated by limited measurements of fatigue life for service-environment exposed specimens, can be used to assess the impact of corrosion in a damage tolerant framework. Complexities (e.g., local H embrittlement, 3D pit geometry, topography dependent initiation, and microstructure sensitive small-crack growth) do not compromise the CM-EIFS estimation, but must be better understood for refined modeling. (c) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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