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Articles

Cracks and extrusions caused by persistent slip bands

Pages 3809-3820 | Received 28 Jan 2013, Accepted 14 Apr 2013, Published online: 16 May 2013
 

Abstract

Cottrell’s account of persistent slip poses a puzzle which has challenged all subsequent research. Persistent slip bands (PSB) endure repeated plastic shear which constantly produces narrower and narrower dipoles, as observed by Veyssière. At the same time, because narrow interstitial dipoles have a larger elastic energy than otherwise identical vacancy ones, shear will eject larger interstitial dipoles to the surface, whilst retaining smaller vacancy ones in the interior, thereby producing excess vacancy loops. This causes a longitudinal tensile stress (the ‘fibre stress’) inside the band. The ejection process lowers the energy by a term linear in the fibre stress, but increases it by a term quadratic in the fibre stress, giving rise to an equilibrium value of the fibre stress, tensile, in order-of-magnitude agreement with observations of extrusions at low temperatures, where only plasticity can occur. The fibre stress produces logarithmic infinities in the surface stress at the edges of the PSB, and thus can be responsible for sharp stage I fatigue cracks. At higher temperatures which allow pipe diffusion and/or volume diffusion, interstitial loops are drawn by the tensile fibre stress into the PSB. Then, as cyclic plasticity attempts to maintain equilibrium, the loops are ejected where the band meets the surface, producing growing extrusions. Such extrusions can grow almost without limit. At low temperatures, the rate of extrusion formation is maximal at one Burgers vector per cycle, but it will be slower than this if it is diffusion limited.

Acknowledgements

This work was initiated by a team Citation[38] whose pioneering observations of persistent slip structure first indicated the outline of a definite dislocation mechanism underlying the endurance limit and crack initiation by cyclic straining. Over many years I am indebted to Profs. Hael Mughrabi and Carl Holste, who encouraged me to attend a series of conferences on fundamental fatigue mechanisms. I am grateful to Robinson College and to the Cavendish Laboratory for continued support after retirement.

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