Materials Australia Magazine | September 2020 | Volume 53 | No 3

Page 31

INDUSTRY NEWS

Look For The Simple Things Source: Fortescue Metals Group

The following short investigation shows that events may not be as complicated as they first seem, and that it is sometimes the simple things that go wrong. A broken M26 bolt was received, from Fortescue Metals Group, for examination into the cause and mode of its failure. It was reported that the material was a 16MnCr5 low alloy steel. The bolt was found to have failed at the first thread, and an area of fatigue was visible on the fracture faces, while the rest of the fracture had sustained post fracture damage. The area of fatigue covered about a quarter of the fracture surface. The small area of fatigue, compared to the rest of the fracture, indicates that the bolt was under a high stress for the bolt material. Transverse cracking was observed at the threads roots and this was consistent with secondary fatigue cracking. On the opposite side of the bolt from the fatigue, cracking on both sides of the thread flanks was found. This indicates that loading on the bolt could have exceeded the material strength. The microstructure was seen to be ferrite and pearlite and the threads had been machined. The chemical analysis of the bolt showed that it met the requirements of a 16MnCr5 low alloy steel. In the annealed condition, such a steel has a hardness of 147 – 187HB (1). The hardness of the bolt under investigation was measured to be 160HB giving a UTS of 540MPa (2) and demonstrates, with the microstructure of ferrite and pearlite, that the material was in the annealed condition. However, when heat treated by quenching and tempering, a UTS of >900MPa is obtainable (1). Such a material strength would greatly increase the fatigue life and stop the thread cracking seen in the present investigation. It was therefore considered that the bolt had not been given the correct heat treatment to obtain the full mechanical properties that the material was capable of attaining. Top: The as received bolt showing failure at the first thread. Middle: Fracture face showing a small crescent of fatigue and the rest of the face suffering from post fracture damage. Bottom left: Microsection showing secondary fatigue cracking at the roots of the machined threads. Bottom right: Microsection showing cracking on the flanks of the threads.

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Materials for Energy and the Environment

31min
pages 52-62

Materials Australia - Short Courses www.materialsaustralia.com.au/training/online-training

3min
pages 63-64

Breaking News

18min
pages 46-51

University Spotlight: University of Adelaide

6min
pages 44-45

AXT and Delmic Install Unique Cathodoluminescence and CLEM Solution at UTS

1min
page 42

Plasma FIB-SEMs – Advantages and Applications

1min
page 43

Miscibility Gap Alloys: Commercialising A ‘Missing Link’ For Renewable Energy

5min
pages 40-41

New Desktop SEM Helps Improve Quality Control, Production Efficiency and Material Cleanliness

9min
pages 36-39

Ultrathin Nanosheets Separate Ions from Water

3min
page 35

Innovative New Ship Cladding Creates Jobs and Reduces Emissions

3min
page 34

Five Things You May Not Know About Choosing a Batch Glass Melt Furnace

2min
page 33

Flexible Phone Screen Chemicals Kick Off New Industry Partnership for South Korea and Australia

3min
page 28

Look For The Simple Things

2min
pages 31-32

Liquid Metal Synthesis for Better Piezoelectrics: Atomically-Thin Tin-Monosulfide

3min
page 30

Women in the Industry Professor Julie Cairney

5min
pages 26-27

Our Certified Materials Professionals (CMatPs

3min
page 22

Why You Should Become a CMatP

2min
page 23

CMatP Profile: Dr Evelyn Ng

8min
pages 20-21

Reports

4min
page 3

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 13 July 2020

2min
page 16

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 10 August 2020

4min
page 17

Enhancing Protection from COVID-19

4min
page 18

VIC & TAS Branch Technical Meeting

4min
page 19

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 8 June 2020

6min
pages 14-15

Professor Simon Ringer Wins Materials Australia Silver Medal

2min
page 10

MAMAS 2020

2min
pages 12-13
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