ESTG - Artigos em revistas internacionais
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Browsing ESTG - Artigos em revistas internacionais by Field of Science and Technology (FOS) "Engenharia e Tecnologia::Engenharia Mecânica"
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- Fatigue Crack Growth in Maraging Steel Obtained by Selective Laser MeltingPublication . Capela, Carlos; Lima Santos, Luís; Antunes, Fernando; Ferreira, José; Costa, José; Jesus, Joel; Prates, PedroThe fatigue crack growth properties of G20Mn5QT cast steel and corresponding butt welds, using compact tension specimens, were monitored and investigated via acoustic emission (AE) techniques. Fatigue crack growth is a combination of cyclic plastic deformations before the crack tip, tensile crack fractures, and shear crack fractures. The cyclic plastic deformations release the maximum amount of energy, which accounts for half of the total energy, and the second-largest number of AE signals, which are of the continuous-wave type. The tensile crack fractures release the second-largest amount of energy and the largest number of AE signals, which are of the burst-wave type. The shear crack fractures release the least amount of energy and the lowest number of AE signals, which are similar to the burst type, albeit with a relatively longer rise time and duration. Crack tip advancement can be regarded as a discontinuous process. The critical area before the crack tip brittlely ruptures when the fatigue damage caused by cyclic plastic deformations reaches critical status. The ruptures produce a large number of tensile crack fractures and rare shear crack fractures. Through fractography observation, the shear crack fractures occur probabilistically around defects caused by casting or welding, which lead to stress and strain in the local complex.
- Fatigue crack growth with overloads/underloads: Interaction effects and surface roughnessPublication . Romeiro, F.; Freitas, M. de; Fonte, M. daThe generalization of damage tolerance to variable amplitude fatigue is of prime importance in order to maintain the reliability of structures and mechanical components subjected to severe loading conditions. Engineering spectra usually contain overloads and underloads which distribution may not be random. However for predicting the life of a structure, a simplified spectrum is usually determined from the real one, in order to reduce testing periods on prototypes. Therefore it is thus important to know which cycles can contribute to crack growth and which can be neglected. This paper presents an analysis of fatigue crack growth on M (T) specimens made of a medium carbon steel DIN Ck45. The specimens are subjected to repeated blocks of cycles made up of one or several (1, 2, 6 or 10) overloads (or underloads) separated by a variable number (10, 1000 or 10 000) of baseline cycles. The main objective of this study is to better understand the mechanisms at the origin of interactions effects due to the presence of overloads (or underloads) at different locations of each block loading. Under constant amplitude loading, single variables ΔK and Kmax are required in crack growth relationships. The transferability of fatigue laws, obtained under constant amplitude loading to variable amplitude fatigue, requires at least an additional variable, whose evolution with crack length accounts for the interactions effects between cycles of different types. Results have shown that the interaction effects in fatigue crack growth are closely related to the mechanisms of crack growth: cyclic plastic behaviour of the material and fracture surface roughness. Measurements of roughness of the surface fracture were carried out in both constant amplitude and variable amplitude tests. The roughness characterization helped to determine the importance of the mechanisms on variable amplitude fatigue crack growth and determine the influence of overloads/underloads on fatigue crack growth.
- Thermo-rheological behaviour of polymer melts in microinjection mouldingPublication . Vasco, Joel; Maia, J.M.; Pouzada, A.S.Microinjection has proven to be one of the most efficient replication methods for microcomponents and microsystems in various domains of microengineering. The use of available commercial microinjection equipment to evaluate the polymeric flow in microchannels would surely contribute to enhancing knowledge on polymeric flow at the microscale under industrial conditions. This approach is appropriate since rheological phenomena such as wall slip, surface tension, melt pressure drop and polymer flow length can be studied. These aspects are not fully dealt with in current commercial simulation software packages. In this study a micromould was designed to assess and characterize the flow in microchannels under realistic industrial conditions.