The Effect of Cold Work on the Thermal Stability of Residual Compression in Surface Enhanced IN718
Abstract
Surface enhancement, the creation of a layer of residual compression at the surface of a component, is widely used to improve the fatigue life in the automotive and aerospace industries. The compressive layer delays fatigue crack initiation and retards small crack propagation. The benefits of surface enhancement are lost if the compressive layer relaxes at the operating temperature of the component. Surface enhancement methods producing minimal cold work are shown to produce the most thermally stable compression. The residual stress and cold work distributions developed in IN718 by shot peening, gravity peening, laser shock peening (LSP) and low plasticity burnishing (LPB) are compared. Estimation of cold work (equivalent true plastic strain) from x-ray diffraction line broadening is described. Thermal relaxation at temperatures ranging from 525 degrees C to 670 degrees C is correlated to the degree of cold working of the surface, independent of the method of surface enhancement. Highly cold worked (> 15%) shot peened surfaces are found to relax to half the initial level of compression in minutes at all temperatures investigated. The rapid initial relaxation is shown to be virtually independent of either time or temperature from 525 degrees C to 670 degrees C. The LPB process is described with application to IN718. High cycle fatigue performance after elevated temperature exposure is compared for surfaces treated by LPB and conventional (8A intensity) shot peening.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 2000
- Accession Number
- ADA452401
Entities
People
- Paul S. Prevey