Fatigue Testing: A Comprehensive Guide to Methods, Standards & S-N Curves
Fatigue testing S-N curve generation on metal specimen showing stress amplitude vs cycle to failureWhat Is Fatigue Testing?
Fatigue testing evaluates a material’s resistance to failure under repeated, cyclic loading — stress fluctuations far below the material’s ultimate tensile strength. It is one of the most critical mechanical characterisation methods because approximately 80–90% of all mechanical failures in service are fatigue-related. The aerospace, automotive, structural engineering, and medical device industries rely on fatigue data to design components with defined service lives, set inspection intervals, and comply with regulatory safety standards.
Fatigue testing is governed by ASTM E466 (force-controlled fatigue), ASTM E606 (strain-controlled fatigue), ASTM E647 (fatigue crack growth), ISO 1099, and ISO 12107.
Key Fatigue Concepts
S-N Curve (Wöhler Curve)
The S-N curve plots stress amplitude (S) against the number of cycles to failure (N) on a log-log scale. Each data point represents one specimen tested to failure at a defined stress level. For steels, the curve often becomes horizontal at a stress level called the endurance limit (fatigue limit) — below which fatigue failure theoretically does not occur regardless of cycles. Aluminium alloys and most non-ferrous metals do not exhibit a true endurance limit.
Mean Stress Effects
Real-world loading rarely occurs at zero mean stress. The Goodman, Gerber, and Morrow equations correct the allowable alternating stress for the presence of tensile mean stress, which accelerates fatigue damage. Compressive mean stress (e.g., from shot peening) improves fatigue life.
Fatigue Crack Growth (ASTM E647)
Fracture mechanics-based fatigue testing measures the crack growth rate (da/dN) as a function of stress intensity factor range (ΔK). This data enables damage-tolerant design — calculating how long a pre-existing crack will take to grow to critical size before catastrophic failure.
Types of Fatigue Tests
Axial Fatigue (ASTM E466/E606)
Specimens are loaded in tension-compression at controlled force or strain amplitudes. Suitable for smooth bars, notched specimens, and component-level testing.
Rotating Beam Fatigue (ASTM E468)
A cylindrical specimen rotates under a bending moment, experiencing fully reversed stress (R = −1) at every surface point per revolution. It is the classical method for generating S-N data at high cycles.
Thermomechanical Fatigue (TMF)
Simultaneous cycling of mechanical strain and temperature simulates the conditions experienced by turbine blades, exhaust components, and reactor pressure vessels. In-phase (IP) and out-of-phase (OP) TMF capture different damage mechanisms.
Industry Applications
The aerospace industry uses fatigue data extensively for structural sizing, damage tolerance analysis, and lifting of engine disks, airframe panels, and landing gear. Automotive engineers validate suspension components, wheels, and powertrain parts against multi-axle road load spectra. Civil engineers assess bridge girders and wind turbine towers against variable amplitude loading.
Conclusion
Fatigue testing is essential for predicting material durability under cyclic loading, enabling engineers to design safer, longer-lasting components and prevent unexpected failures; supported by standards from ASTM International and International Organisation for Standardisation, it provides the critical data needed for life estimation, reliability assessment, and compliance across demanding engineering applications.
Why Choose Infinita Lab for Fatigue Testing?
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Why is fatigue testing important? Since most mechanical failures are fatigue-related, it is crucial for predicting service life, improving safety, and preventing unexpected breakdowns.
What is an S-N curve? An S-N (stress vs. number of cycles) curve shows the relationship between applied stress and the number of cycles a material can endure before failure.
What is fatigue limit or endurance limit? It is the stress level below which a material (typically steels) can theoretically endure infinite cycles without failure.
What are the types of fatigue tests? Major types include axial fatigue, rotating beam fatigue, and thermomechanical fatigue (TMF).
What is fatigue crack growth testing? It measures how cracks propagate under cyclic stress, helping predict failure and enabling damage-tolerant design.