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Failure analysis of an aluminum extrusion aircraft wing component

Konstantinos Stamoulis (Department of Civil Engineering, University of Thessaly, Volos, Greece) (Department of Engineering, State Aircraft Factory, Hellenic Air Force, Athens, Greece)
Dimitrios Panagiotopoulos (Department of Mechanics, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece)
George Pantazopoulos (ELKEME Hellenic Research Centre for Metals S.A., Oinofyta Viotias, Greece)
Spyros Papaefthymiou (School of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece) (Centre for Metals S.A., ELKEME Hellenic Research, Oinofyta Viotias, Greece)

International Journal of Structural Integrity

ISSN: 1757-9864

Article publication date: 5 December 2016

569

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to deal with the failure analysis of a fractured spar stiffener, extruded from 7075-T6 aluminum alloy, which was found in the central wing, trailing edge structure of a military transport aircraft. The previous loading history and the dominant environmental factors (corrosive and humid atmosphere, water entrapment, etc.) suggest corrosion and fatigue as the principal failure modes, synergistically acting on the wing component.

Design/methodology/approach

This study presents the failure analysis concentrated on finding evidence of failure mechanisms and plausible root-cause(s) of the fractured spar stiffener. Chemical analysis, stereo and scanning electron microscopy, as well as finite element analysis employed as the main analytical tools for material characterization and failure investigation.

Findings

The overall evaluation of the findings suggest that the failure caused by a synergy of two mechanisms; a crack initiated in the longitudinal, extrusion direction by an environmentally assisted corrosion attack, then propagated by the superimposed transverse stress field, branched/deflected due to a low crack driving force and extended in a transverse path through a high cycle fatigue process. Finally, the complete fracture occurred as fast fracture, resulted by a ductile overload.

Originality/value

This paper deals with an industrial damage case study, providing analysis and modeling from structural engineering standpoint. The aforementioned findings concerning the fractured aircraft component allow gaining a deeper knowledge about the mechanisms of crack initiation and propagation which, in turn, can produce a valuable feedback to design, inspection and maintenance procedures. This includes a modified heat treatment from T6 to T73 temper for the redesigned component.

Keywords

Citation

Stamoulis, K., Panagiotopoulos, D., Pantazopoulos, G. and Papaefthymiou, S. (2016), "Failure analysis of an aluminum extrusion aircraft wing component", International Journal of Structural Integrity, Vol. 7 No. 6, pp. 748-761. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSI-10-2015-0050

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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