The fatigue crack initiation period, previously thought to be a necessary precursor to fatigue crack propagation and eventual failure, is considered here to be a negligible phase in the fatigue failure of polycrystalline metals. Rather this period is considered to be the propagation of a defect of microstructural dimensions by a variety of processes. The significance of this alternative view is examined in relation to corrosion fatigue, models of short crack growth, different loading modes, and the enhancement of fatigue resistance by surface shot-peening treatments. In both inert and aggressive environments, the fatigue lifetime of plain steel specimens of various strengths and treatments is predominantly determined by the early propagation of short cracks of microstructural dimensions. Microstructural fracture mechanics, rather than continuum mechanics, can quantify both pit growth and Stage I shear crack growth behavior before the defect reaches the dominant microstructural barrier which controls the fatigue behavior of the material. The important processes that determine lifetime are those that are strongly dependent on the synergism between the aggressive environment and cyclic stresses; these are the pitting, Stage I and the Stage I-to-Stage II crack propagation processes. A model has been produced to quantify these three important stages of lifetime named above. Under torsion loading, where Stage I cracks prefer to propagate along the surface, an intermittent series of deceleration/acceleration events of crack growth occur across the first few grain boundaries until the defect is blocked in its further development by a major microstructural barrier. When this barrier is breached, the environmentally-assisted Stage I crack rapidly becomes a Stage II crack. Under push-pull loading, the Stage I environmentally-assisted crack can propagate faster into the bulk material and, as a consequence, the transition to a Stage II environmentally-assisted crack is rapid thereby eliminating the need for the intermittent process observed under torsion loading. With no environmentally-assisted fatigue processes (i.e., testing in air) reversed torsion and push-pull loading test data can best be correlated by a von Mises criterion. Corrosion fatigue lifetimes can best be correlated by a Rankine (tensile stress) criterion. Shot-peening enhances the corrosion fatigue resistance of polycrystalline metals by inducing residual compressive stresses in the surface and creating numerous and more rapidly formed microcracks. This is probably caused by the presence of variously oriented plastically deformed bands within the surface microstructure and “short crack-short crack” interactions both of which delay the progress of the dominant crack toward its final Stage II phase.
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