The Mechanism of Fatigue: A Review

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. C. A. Thurston
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
12197 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

AT A FATIGUE SESSION organised by the A.S.T.M. in 1949, R. E. Peterson presented a brief introductory paper ( 1) in which lie referred to a discussion on the fatigue of metals which took place in England in 1849, and then proceeded to review some of the subsequent researches concerning the mechanism of fatigue. In the course of the review, he discussed metallograpl1ic studies with single crystals and polycrystalline materials, studies with X-ray methods, and the application of the electron microscope. During that hundred-year period considerable progress was made toward a better under-standing of the nature of fatigue, although it is probable that even greater attention was directed to the more practical aspects of the problem, such as the effects of notches, temperature, corrosion, surface treatment, residual stresses, and so on. Since then there has been an appreciable acceleration in the tempo of the fundamental work, partly influenced by the rapid development of the theory of dislocations, with the result that our knowledge of the mechanism of slip, the initiation of fatigue cracks, and their subsequent propagation, has still further advanced, although it is by no means complete as yet. The present paper is an attempt to out-line the more recent developments in these basic studies, to correlate them when possible, and to draw attention to those directions in which research might profitably be pursued.
Citation

APA: R. C. A. Thurston  (1957)  The Mechanism of Fatigue: A Review

MLA: R. C. A. Thurston The Mechanism of Fatigue: A Review. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1957.

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