The effect of overloads on threshold and crack closure

Abstract The effect of tensile and compressive overloads on the threshold stress intensity level and crack closure behaviour of one aluminium alloy and three steels has been investigated. A few tensile overloads significantly decreased the crack propagation rate and increased the threshold stress intensity. An initially decreased and then increased opening stress was mostly responsible for the delayed retardation and crack arrest. Intermittant compressive overloads significantly accelerated the crack propagation and decreased the threshold stress intensity which was a function of the frequency of overloading. The opening stress was decreased to below zero after a large compressive peak load, and it took >105 cycles for the opening stress to return to its stable level. During this period an initially high crack propagation rate also gradually decreased to the stable value.