Hi All,
I have an application in which a piece of 1100 untempered Al us bent around a ~2" radius, and then re-formed back to its original flat shape (it starts as a flat sheet). The part is 2" wide x ~6" long x .040" thick, and is bent almost 180 deg around the aforementioned radius by hand. This happens a few times a day for as long as the Al lasts. I have searched for some type of empirical data or theoretical failure model to help me predict how long the part will last, but of yet have not found anything.
I've done some experimenting of my own and have gotten a part to last around 100 cycles, however my method was not very controlled. Does anyone have experience with something like this? Is there a mathematical model I can use to help predict (even ballpark) the point at which failure in fatigue will occur?
I have an application in which a piece of 1100 untempered Al us bent around a ~2" radius, and then re-formed back to its original flat shape (it starts as a flat sheet). The part is 2" wide x ~6" long x .040" thick, and is bent almost 180 deg around the aforementioned radius by hand. This happens a few times a day for as long as the Al lasts. I have searched for some type of empirical data or theoretical failure model to help me predict how long the part will last, but of yet have not found anything.
I've done some experimenting of my own and have gotten a part to last around 100 cycles, however my method was not very controlled. Does anyone have experience with something like this? Is there a mathematical model I can use to help predict (even ballpark) the point at which failure in fatigue will occur?