ASTM E2714 – Test for Creep-Fatigue Testing
In ASTM E2714, uniaxial forces are applied to homogeneous material to determine the properties and behavior of materials under creep and fatigue deformation or under crack formation.

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- Overview
- Scope, Applications, and Benefits
- Test Process
- Specifications
- Instrumentation
- Results and Deliverables
Overview
ASTM E2714 delineates a methodology for conducting isothermal, uniaxial creep-fatigue assessments on ostensibly homogeneous materials. The introduction of “hold times” throughout a fatigue cycle underpins this technique.
ASTM E2714 specifies maintaining a constant strain or stress for a predetermined duration, in contrast to conventional fatigue tests that cycle rapidly. This hold period more closely mimics the “start-stop” or “steady-state” cycles that industrial components undergo by allowing creep deformation and environmental degradation (such as oxidation) to accumulate.

Scope, Applications, and Benefits
Scope
In ASTM E2714, materials are tested to determine the effects of fatigue, creep, and oxidation. These phenomena damage materials over time. Creep is the deformation of material under the influence of persistent mechanical stresses. The initiation and propagation of cracks in a material under cyclic loading—applied, unloaded, and reapplied—is known as fatigue.
This test applies cyclic loads to the specimen at elevated temperatures to introduce fatigue and creep. Cyclic loads deform the specimen, and elevated temperatures cause creep deformation.
Applications
- Power generation components (boilers, turbines, steam pipes).
- Aerospace engine and exhaust system materials.
- Petrochemical and refinery equipment operating at high temperatures.
- Nuclear reactor structural and pressure boundary materials.
- High-temperature alloys are used in cyclic thermal environments.
Benefits
- Enables accurate assessment of material performance under realistic service conditions.
- Supports life prediction and damage tolerance analysis for high-temperature components.
- Improves design reliability and safety for both cyclic and sustained-load applications.
- Generates standardized data for material comparison and qualification.
- Assists in identifying failure mechanisms due to creep-fatigue interaction.
Testing Process
Specimen Preparation
Prepare a standard specimen with specified geometry and surface finish.
1Test Setup
Mount the specimen in a strain-controlled, high-temperature testing system.
2Instrumentation
Attach and calibrate high-temperature extensometers.
3Post-Test Evaluation
Examine failure mode and report creep-fatigue life results.
4Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Test Control Mode | Strain-controlled |
| Loading Type | Cyclic loading with hold times |
| Test Temperature | Elevated temperature, material-specific |
| Temperature Control | Furnace with ±2 °C stability |
| Data Recorded | Stress, strain, time, cycles |
| End-of-Life Criterion | Fracture or specified stiffness/load drop |
Instrumentation Used
- Servo-hydraulic or electromechanical fatigue testing system
- High-accuracy load cell
- High-temperature furnace or environmental chamber
- High-temperature extensometer or strain measurement device
- Temperature measurement and control system (thermocouples)
- Creep-fatigue rated specimen grips and fixtures
- Closed-loop control and data acquisition system
Results and Deliverables
- Number of cycles to failure under creep-fatigue conditions
- Stress–strain hysteresis behavior over test duration
- Effect of hold time on creep-fatigue life
- Evidence of cyclic softening or hardening
- Accumulated creep damage during hold periods
- Mode and location of specimen failure
- Data for creep-fatigue interaction and life prediction models
Frequently Asked Questions
ASTM has several standards related to creep testing, such as ASTM E139, ASTM E292, ASTM E328, and ASTM E2714. Each standard specifies the test method, apparatus, specimen preparation, loading, temperature, measurement, analysis, and reporting of creep test results.
Creep tests on plastics are described in the following standards: ISO 899-1 and ISO 899-2, as well as ASTM D2990. Pipes are tested using a full-notch creep test (FNCT) to ISO 16770. Since this type of test runs over a long period, it is typical to test multiple specimens simultaneously.
A creep test, sometimes referred to as a stress-relaxation test, determines the amount of deformation a material experiences over time while under a continuous tensile or compressive load at a constant temperature.
While fatigue testing focuses on cyclic loading and crack propagation, creep testing assesses the deformation of materials under constant load and temperature conditions.
Textbooks generally describe three stages of creep: primary or transient, secondary or steady-state, and tertiary or acceleration creep. These appear after initial strain ε0 upon loading when the test or homologous temperature is high enough.
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