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| Cutoff Values of Detail Fatigue Strength for Aluminum Alloy Treated by Laser Shock Peening and Mechanical Shot Peening |
| JIANG Huiyang1, WANG Xiyan2, HE Guangzhi2, CHE Zhigang3, WANG Xinyu4, JIANG Angran3, SUN Rujian3 |
1. Shenyang Military Representative Office of Shenyang Military Representative Bureau, Naval Equipment Department of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, Shenyang 110081, China;
2. China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou 221116, China;
3. Aviation Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Advanced Surface Engineering, AVIC Manufacturing Technology Institute, Beijing 100024, China;
4. Shenyang Aircraft Corporation, Shenyang 110850, China |
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Abstract Aluminum alloys are extensively utilized in critical aerospace structural components, where surface conditions directly impact fatigue life and structural reliability. To investigate the fatigue strength enhancement of typical structures through laser shock peening (LSP) and mechanical shot peening (MSP), notched specimens of 7050 and 2024 aluminum alloys were prepared. The effects of LSP and MSP on residual stress fields and surface hardness were systematically examined, with subsequent analysis of changes in the detail fatigue strength cutoff (DFRcutoff). Key findings include: MSP demonstrated superior amplitude and uniformity in surface compressive residual stress for both alloys compared to LSP, though with significantly shallower affected depths; LSP induced pronounced surface hardening, while MSP provided limited hardness improvement. LSP elevated DFRcutoff of 2024 and 7050 aluminum alloys by 21.9% (163.7 MPa) and 48.1% (175.0 MPa), respectively, substantially exceeding MSP-treated specimens. For notched structures, LSP generated deeper compressive residual stress layers and higher microhardness, effectively delaying fatigue crack initiation/propagation at stress concentration zones and enhancing fatigue resistance.
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| PACS: V261.8 |
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