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Original Articles

Crack Propagation of Rolling Contact Fatigue in Ball Bearing Steel Due to Tensile Strain

Pages 567-575 | Received 26 Oct 2003, Published online: 25 Mar 2008
 

Abstract

Crack propagations or failure modes in rolling element bearings, which had been difficult to explain via conventional crack propagation mechanisms such as the orthogonal shear stress mechanism, were discussed from the viewpoint of a tensile strain mechanism. Contact stresses are compressive in three axes, whose values differ from each other; then strain can be tensile in one of these directions, acting at a right angle to the direction of maximum compressive stress. A crack is considered to propagate by this tensile strain. When contact stress is small, a crack produced by some cause can propagate by this elastic tensile strain. When contact stress is large, residual tensile strain is produced by plastic deformation, which can also influence the crack propagation. Several failure modes of rolling element bearings, which had been difficult to explain, were explained by tensile strain.

Notes

Presented at the STLE/ASME Tribology Conference in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

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