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Original Articles

Extrusions and intrusions in fatigued metals. Part 2. AFM and EBSD study of the early growth of extrusions and intrusions in 316L steel fatigued at room temperature

, , , , &
Pages 1337-1372 | Received 28 Nov 2008, Accepted 23 Mar 2009, Published online: 01 Jun 2009
 

Abstract

Early stages of surface relief evolution of persistent slip markings (PSMs), formed in areas where persistent slip bands (PSBs) intersect the free surface, in polycrystalline 316L stainless steel cycled with constant plastic strain amplitude were studied using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and electron backscattering diffraction (EBSD). Focused ion beam (FIB) technique was employed to obtain additional, more detailed information on the shape of PSMs. To reveal true qualitative and quantitative information on the simultaneous growth of intrusions and extrusions within individual PSMs, identical areas both on the specimen surface and on its inverse copy obtained via plastic replica were studied using AFM. Intrusions are preceded by extrusions regardless of orientation of individual grains of the polycrystal. The first intrusions appear largely around 1% of fatigue life at the moment when ‘static’ extrusions are developed. They appear predominantly but not exclusively at the side of extrusions where the emerging active slip plane is inclined to the surface at an acute angle. They grow faster than the stage of stable extrusion growth. Typical morphology of mature PSMs developed at 15% of fatigue life consists of ribbon-like extrusions accompanied by two thin parallel intrusions along both PSB–matrix interfaces. Experimental data on the morphology and growth of extrusions and intrusions are discussed in relation to the theoretical models and computer simulations of surface relief evolution leading to fatigue crack initiation.

†Present address: Institute of Material Science, Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg, Gustav-Zeuner-Str. 5, 09596 Freiberg, Germany

Acknowledgements

Authors are indebted to J. Dymáček for his careful performance of fatigue tests, to Dr. M. Petrenec for his help with statistical data processing and to Dr. T. Vystavěl (FEI Co., Brno) for his skilful co-operation during the preparation and documentation of FIB sections. Support of this work by grants No. 106/06/1096 and No. 101/07/1500 from the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic and by research project No. AV0Z 2041057 and grant No. 1QS200410502 from the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic is acknowledged.

Notes

†Present address: Institute of Material Science, Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg, Gustav-Zeuner-Str. 5, 09596 Freiberg, Germany

Note

1. Polycrystalline 316L stainless steel is a very suitable candidate for such studies from many aspects. It teeters on the transition from wavy slip to planar slip and, thus, its surface relief topography is not as complicated as in the case of copper. Owing to its corrosion resistance, it is predestined for tedious, time-consuming systematic AFM observations.

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