An approach to interpreting metastable austenitic material sensors for fatigue analysis

verfasst von
Christian Heinrich, René Gansel, Günter Schäfer, Sebastian Barton, Armin Lohrengel, Hans Jürgen Maier
Abstract

The transformation of metastable austenite to martensite under mechanical loading can be harnessed to create a material sensor which records a measure of the load history without the need for electrical energy and can be read out at arbitrary intervals via eddy current probing, thus leading to an ultra-low-power sensing solution. This paper presents possibilities of processing this load amplitude-dependent evolution of martensite content loading for component fatigue analysis. The general method is based on using a theoretical material model typically used in finite element analyses which includes hardening plasticity and phase transformation to precompute tables of stress amplitude or cumulative damage corresponding to different sensor readings which can be stored on a low power processing system onboard the component for energy-efficient lookup. At nominal single amplitude loading, the sensor can be used as a load cycle counter for known loads or as an overload detection device upon divergent martensite content rise. Interpretation of block program loading is less practical due to resolution issues. Under random loading, sequence effects get averaged out; interpretation is easiest with narrow load spectra, but information can be gained from very wide spectra as well. Multiple sensors at different locations can aid interpretation. Uncertainty due to necessary assumptions and untreated influences of temperature and loading rate is discussed.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Werkstoffkunde
Externe Organisation(en)
Technische Universität Clausthal
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Smart materials and structures
Band
33
Anzahl der Seiten
12
ISSN
0964-1726
Publikationsdatum
05.06.2024
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Signalverarbeitung, Tief- und Ingenieurbau, Atom- und Molekularphysik sowie Optik, Allgemeine Materialwissenschaften, Physik der kondensierten Materie, Werkstoffmechanik, Elektrotechnik und Elektronik
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-665X/ad4f38 (Zugang: Offen)