New York Paper - February, 1918 - Transverse Fissures in Steel Rails (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. E. Howard
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
53
File Size:
2716 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1918

Abstract

On Aug. 25, 1911, a rail failed on the Lehigh Valley Railroad, causing a disastrous wreck. The surface of the fracture was in a plane at right angles to the length of the rail. There was a dark-colored, oval spot on this surface, located on the gage side of the head, representing the part of the rail which was the first to fracture. The nucleus of this spot showed that the fracture had an interior origin. Other fractures of this kind, the peripheries of which had not reached the surface of the rail, presented surfaces having a (silvery luster. The darkened surface of the present fracture was caused, doubtless, by the air having had access to it. This fracture was recognized as a fatigue fracture, of a modified type, its interior origin having been due to a component in the rail which is not usually present in cases of fatigue fractures. The metal next the running surface of the head of the rail was in a state of internal compression, this being the component not commonly met with in other cases, and which caused the fracture to have its interior origin. For the purpose of giving this modified type of fatigue fracture a specific name, for identification, the term "transverse fissure" was applied. No mystery was thought to attach to its formation, or to its development. The explanation of its occurrence seemed obvious in the light of common knowledge upon the behavior of steel under repeated alternate stresses.' By reason of the state of internal compression at the running surface, the maximum tensile stresses in the head, ander bending loads, were along an interior element. Here the tensile strains were higher than in the fibers more remote from the neutral axis. Under such conditions the fracture of the rail would be expected to have an interior origin. A discussion of the subject of transverse fissures essentially becomes a discussion of fatigue fractures, since they are believed to be identical. The descriptive term employed, merely for the identification of this type of fatigue fracture, had the appearance of creating alarm. Apprehensions arose that a new phenomenon in the physical properties of steel had presented itself, the explanation of which was sought in every
Citation

APA: J. E. Howard  (1918)  New York Paper - February, 1918 - Transverse Fissures in Steel Rails (with Discussion)

MLA: J. E. Howard New York Paper - February, 1918 - Transverse Fissures in Steel Rails (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.

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