Fatigue failure analysis of roll steel pins from a chain assembly: Fracture mechanism and numerical modeling, Engineering Failure Analysis, 101 (2019), 320–328
Sofia Papadopoulou, Ioannis Pressas, Athanasios Vazdirvanidis, George Pantazopoulos
Abstract
The current study is focused on the investigation of the failure case history pertaining to the
in-service fractured steel pins of a chain assembly installed in a continuous cold drawing
machine. The findings of the present investigation showed that the pins failed due to
multiple-origin rotating bending fatigue under low applied load, due to the application of
tensile and/or bending stresses, initiated from the pin circumference. The multiple-crack
initiation is consistent to severe stress concentration conditions, as imposed by the low fillet
radius attributed to the original pin design. No microstructural abnormalities were detected,
that could have been correlated to the principal cause of failure. In the context of the
present evaluation, analytical methods such as visual inspection, optical microscopy, SEM
fractography and microhardness testing were utilized. Moreover, a finite element analysis of
the assembled chain was performed in order to investigate the stress distribution during the
operation of the chain and to formulate a sound quantitative approach which will assist in
better understanding of chain/pin loading conditions. The primarily insufficient component
design resulted in high stress concentration factors interacted with the soft annealed
material used for the component and caused fatigue under the presence of fluctuating
stresses.