1. Introduction
Fatigue failure is the main form of failure of metal mechanical parts. When the metal material is subjected to alternating loads, the initiation and propagation of fatigue cracks occur, which may lead to the fatigue failure behavior of the material. Based on existing studies, the fracture behavior of metal parts is closely related to the initiation and propagation of fatigue cracks [
1,
2,
3]. As early as the 1960s, a method of studying the fatigue crack propagation mechanism based on strain measure and analysis was proposed [
4,
5]. In the past ten years, there have been many achievements in studying the fatigue crack propagation mechanism by studying the evolution law of the strain field at the crack tip. Alshammrei et al. [
6] combined DIC and finite element analysis to conduct full-field mechanical characterization of fatigue crack growth of 316L stainless steel under cyclic loading conditions. The evolution of the strain field at the crack tip was observed, and the effect of crack closure behavior on crack growth was evaluated. Malitckii et al. [
7] used DIC technology to study the strain accumulation during the propagation of microstructural small fatigue cracks in 18%Cr ferritic stainless steel polycrystalline materials. Kujawski [
8] proposed a simple analysis method to estimate the elastic–plastic strain and stress in front of the stable growth fatigue crack tip, which was in good agreement with the DIC calculation results.
DIC is a non-interference and non-contact precise optical measurement method based on digital image processing, which is used to measure the global displacement and strain field of the loaded body [
9,
10,
11]. For measurement of the deformation field in the crack tip region, DIC is better than other global photometric methods, including holographic interferometry [
12], Moiré interferometry [
13,
14], and laser speckle photography technology [
15,
16]. It has the characteristics of higher accuracy, stronger applicability, and multiscale measurement ability. In addition, DIC has lower requirements for experimental conditions, and only needs to make speckle images on the surface of the specimen to perform in- and ex-situ measurements at different lengths and scales. Ex-situ DIC can provide higher resolution strain field measurements [
17,
18,
19], but the strain field can only be measured on unloaded specimens, and the measured data are residual strain data. In-situ DIC is a better choice for observing the continuous distribution of the strain and displacement fields during crack propagation. A combination of the DIC technique and a microscopic camera system can provide enough spatial resolution to spatially and temporally measure the crack tip strain field during fatigue crack growth process. These characteristics have made micro-DIC the first choice for fatigue crack growth research in recent years, rather than scanning electron microscopy–digital image correlation (SEM-DIC) or synchrotron radiation X-ray devices that require more complex technology and specialized equipment [
20]. Zhu et al. [
20] studied the normal strain near the fatigue propagation crack of a 316L stainless steel compact tension (CT) specimen under the action of tensile cyclic load by micro-DIC. Based on the analysis of the displacement and strain measurement error, a method used to improve the precision of micro-DIC measurement was proposed. Lu et al. [
21] used the in situ DIC technique to study the crack tip strain field of static and propagating fatigue cracks in CT specimens of 316L stainless steel under tensile-tensile cyclic loading. Wei Zhang et al. [
22] performed high-resolution in-situ experiments on thin-plate specimens under cyclic loading with stepwise loading. The acquired microscopic images were analyzed by DIC to obtain the strain distribution at each loading step, and the change in the size of the plastic zone was further analyzed.
The main problem of existing in situ deformation field measurements carried out by micro-DIC is that the entire process of crack propagation cannot be continuously photographed due to the small field of view of the microscopic camera. At present, the solution is to adjust the microscopic camera to the crack tip position to collect the reference image and then apply the cyclic load to the specimen to perform the fatigue crack growth test. The target images of cracked specimens at different positions in a load cycle in which the fatigue crack propagates in the microscopic field of view are collected, and then the micro-strain field near the crack tip can be obtained. When the crack propagation is beyond the field of view of the microscopic camera, it is necessary to stop the fatigue crack growth test, adjust the camera to the new crack tip position to collect the reference image under the unloading condition, and then perform the fatigue crack growth test again to generate a new propagated crack. In this way, the propagation process of the crack, especially the long crack beyond the microscopic field of view, cannot be measured in situ, and crack tip deformation field data of the whole process of crack propagation cannot be obtained.
Therefore, a method for the in-situ measurement of the strain field at the crack tip based on sub-reference image stitching and matching combined with the micro-DIC technique is proposed in this paper. The sub-reference image stitching and matching algorithm include an image stitching algorithm based on scale invariant feature transform (SIFI) key point detection [
23] and the progressive sampling consensus (PROSAC) fitting algorithm [
24], and the image matching algorithm is based on a template matching algorithm. The image stitching algorithm is used to obtain the full-field reference image, and the template matching algorithm is used to find the sub-reference image corresponding to the target image of the crack tip in the whole crack propagation process in the full-field reference image. Through DIC calculation between the sub-reference image and the crack tip target image, the strain field of the growing fatigue crack tip can be obtained continuously. Among the various advanced steel grades, a third generation AHSS was proposed by Speer et al. in 2003, named quenching and partitioning steel (Q&P steel) [
25]. Q&P steel with a final microstructure of martensite, retained austenite and/or ferrite, exhibits a combination of high strength and ductility, and has been considered as a potential candidate for automotive steel. The “980” in Q&P980 represents the grade of yield strength. Through low cycle fatigue crack growth testing of the CT specimen with a mode I notch made of the third generation ASHH steel Q&P980, fatigue cracks were generated and propagated continuously, in situ growing crack tip strain fields were measured using the proposed method, strain field data were analyzed, and the measurement accuracy was verified.
2. In Situ Measurement System of the Strain Field at the Fatigue Crack Tip
2.1. Overall Measurement Method
A flow chart of the measurement method proposed in this paper is shown in
Figure 1, which includes three stages: Preparation before the FCG test, the FCG test, and offline data processing. The macroscopic and microscopic cameras are calibrated with Zhang’s calibration method before the FCG test [
26]. Two calibration boards with different specifications were made according to the field of view. Microscopic and macroscopic cameras take images from nine different angles separately. The distortion coefficients of the cameras and lens are calculated using the spatial locations of these images. The distortion coefficients of the cameras are used to correct the reference and target images. The corrected sub-reference images are stitched to obtain a full-field reference image. During the fatigue crack growth test, the microscopic camera tracks and captures the microscopic speckle image of the crack tip, while the macroscopic camera captures the global image of the macro crack. The speckle images are corrected to obtain target images, and the macroscopic global crack images are corrected to be used for calculating the crack length. The target images are used to search the full-field reference image through template matching so as to obtain the sub-reference images corresponding to the target images. The strain field data at the crack tip are calculated using the micro-DIC technique. The micro-DIC algorithm, image stitching algorithm, and template matching algorithm proposed in this paper are introduced in detail in
Section 2.
2.2. Materials and Specimen
A test of the CT specimen was made of Q&P980 material with a mode I crack notch. The parameters of the specimen’s geometry are shown in
Figure 2. One side of the specimen was polished into a smooth surface with a diffuse effect to show the crack path information, and a professional speckle spray pen was used to produce uniform microscopic speckles on the surface of the other side. A uniaxial tensile test of a dog bone specimen made of Q&P980 was carried out and the stress–strain curve was fitted by the Lamberg-Osgood (R-O) model [
27]. The mechanical property parameters of Q&P980 were obtained by modifying the curve fitting results, as shown in
Table 1.
The fitting process of the R-O curve is as follows: The stress–strain equation of the R-O model is shown in Equation (1).
where
and
are the elastic and plastic strains, respectively,
is the total strain, and
is the hardening index. The R-O model is fitted using real stress–strain data. The formula for calculating the real stress and strain is shown in Equation (2):
where
and
are the real strain and real stress.
The fitting results of the least square method are shown in
Figure 3a. It can be found that the linearity of the fitting data is insufficient. This shows that the plastic strain formula of Q&P980 cannot fully characterize the plastic segment. It is noted that the fitted curve can be separated into two straight lines, thus considering the classical logarithm fitting function (second-order Gaussian fitting). The second-order Gaussian function is shown in Equation (4), and the Gaussian fitting curve is shown in
Figure 3b. The first and second derivatives of the Gaussian curve are shown in
Figure 3c,d. The extreme point of the second derivative curve is solved as the boundary point of the piecewise straight line. The result is −1.65, with a converted strain of 0.022. The stress corresponding to this strain value is 918.80 MPa.
Based on the segmented data, Gaussian fitting was continued. The fitting results are shown in
Figure 4a,b. The results show that piecewise fitting has better linearity. The R-O constitutive equation was modified, and the modified results are shown in Equation (5):
The fitting results compared to the original data are shown in
Figure 4c. The overall fitting is good. However, as shown in
Figure 4d, the results near the intersection of two curves are poor. The common tangent line of two curves was calculated as the transition curve. The calculation method of the common tangent line is digital analog iterative calculation. The final R-O fitting results are shown in
Figure 4e, and the modified R-O constitutive equation is shown in Equation (6). The mechanical property parameters were obtained as shown in
Table 1.
Speckle quality directly affects the accuracy of DIC calculation. In this paper, the average gray gradient and the average gray second derivative were used to evaluate the speckle quality. The average gray gradient is the main index, and the calculation formula is shown in Equation (7):
where
W and
H are the width and height of the image (in pixels), respectively;
and
are the grayscale derivatives of pixel
in the
and
directions, respectively, which can be calculated using commonly used gradient operators.
The second derivative of the average gray level was used as an auxiliary evaluation index, as shown in Equation (8):
In practice, the average gray gradient is preferred for calculation, and the larger the , the better the speckle quality. When is the same, the second derivative of the average gray level is further calculated, and the smaller the , the better the speckle quality.
2.3. Measurement System Components
The composition of the measurement system is shown in
Figure 5, which mainly includes a low cycle fatigue test system and a multiscale fatigue crack image acquisition system. The experimental set up is shown in
Figure 6. The low cycle fatigue test system is composed of a hydraulic servo fatigue tester, specimen, force sensor, load control unit, and precision displacement platform. The hydraulic servo fatigue tester is PWS-50, produced by Tianshui Hongshan Company, with a maximum load of 50 kN. The multiscale fatigue crack image acquisition system includes a computer with synchronous image acquisition software, the proposed digital image processing software, VIC-2D software, a macroscopic camera system, a microscopic camera system, and a camera light source. The synchronous image acquisition software controls the fixed macroscopic camera and tracking microscopic camera to capture images at the same time on both sides of the CT specimen by receiving the force signal feedback from the load control unit.
The parameters of the macro and micro acquisition systems are shown in
Figure 7. The macroscopic focal length of the camera is 35 mm, the working distance is 232 mm, the field of view under this working distance is 40 × 30 mm, and the corrected spatial resolution is 19.47 μm/pixel. The microscopic camera uses a telephoto lens set. In this paper, the maximum magnification was used to shoot the minimum field of view. The focal length of the camera is 105 mm, the working distance is 115 mm, the field of view is 4 × 2.11 mm, and the spatial resolution of the corrected image is 0.97 μm/pixel.
2.4. Multiscale Fatigue Crack and Speckle Image Acquisition
The in-situ image acquisition operation is controlled through the self-developed multiscale image acquisition software, as shown in
Figure 6, which includes the functions of tracking load value acquisition, crack length detection, and speckle quality evaluation. For a short crack whose length is less than 2 mm, the crack length cannot be accurately measured by the image captured by the macroscopic camera. In this paper, according to the method of reference [
28], virtual extensometer technology was used to realize accurate measurement of the short crack length.
The speckle image acquisition operation consists of two steps, namely the acquisition of reference images before the fatigue propagation test and acquisition of crack tip target images during fatigue crack growth. The maximum fatigue crack length of this test was set to approximately 8 mm, and the microscopic camera moving step length was set to 2 mm according to the size of the microscopic transverse field of view of 4 mm. Four speckle sub-reference images were collected before the FCG test by moving the microscopic camera three times along the crack propagation direction with a 2 mm step length, as shown in
Figure 8. Movement of the microscopic camera was accomplished through the precision displacement platform, as shown in
Figure 6. After the speckle image had been captured, the microscopic camera was returned to the position where the first image was captured.
The load parameters of the FCG test are as follows: Average load value of 1.8 kN, amplitude value of 1.2 kN, fatigue testing frequency of 8 Hz. According to the previous test experience, the fatigue crack can grow to approximately 15 mm stably under these test conditions. In the process of the fatigue crack growth test, the position of the microscopic camera was adjusted by observing the approximate position of the crack tip in the microscopic field of view. The position of the microscopic camera was adjusted to ensure that the collected crack tip was not at the edge of the image. Seven groups of images with cycle numbers of 5300, 10,000, 15,000, 20,000, 22,500, 25,000, and 27,000 were collected. When collecting images, the vibration frequency of the fatigue tester needs to be reduced to 0.01 Hz. The multiscale image acquisition software receives the force signal from the load control unit, and when the force value is equal to the set acquisition load value, it sends an acquisition signal to the microscopic camera. The microscopic camera collects one picture every time it receives an acquisition signal. Meanwhile, the related force values should be recorded. When the maximum load is reached, the macroscopic camera is triggered to capture a global crack image. Finally, each group with 26 microscopic speckle images and one macroscopic global crack image can be obtained and saved on the computer in a defined order.
Seven speckle images and seven macroscopic global crack images at the maximum load corresponding to different cycle numbers are shown in
Figure 9 and
Figure 10, respectively.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, based on the combination of the image processing (image stitching and image template matching) and micro-DIC, a method for the in-situ measurement of the microscopic strain field was proposed. This in situ method realizes dynamic tracking measurement of the strain field near the crack tip during crack growth. The feasibility and accuracy of the method were verified by FCG tests. The conclusions are as follows:
(1) Image stitching and template matching technology are accurate, which is embodied the “Original reference image” and “Reference image of template matching” being exactly the same. This result means that the reference images obtained by image stitching and template matching technology are correct.
(2) The average strain error of the three search lines was 4.3%, 2.2%, and 2.1%, respectively, and the maximum error was less than 10%. The results showed that the measured strain field has high accuracy. The in-situ measurement method proposed in this paper is feasible and accurate.
(3) A butterfly shape and strain concentration phenomenon of the strain field near the crack tip were observed. With growth of the crack, the strain concentration became more obvious, and the butterfly wings gradually expanded. For the same crack length, the greater the load, the more obvious the strain concentration.
(4) The method proposed in this paper does not make higher requirements in regard to the performance of the algorithm used and can be further optimized. In addition, more materials need to be tested, which can improve the usefulness under different conditions.
(5) On the basis of the in-situ strain field measured by this method, the plastic area under the microscopic field of view can be further measured. For example, a method for in situ measurement of the size of the cyclic plastic zone can be studied. In combination with the theoretical analysis, the law of fatigue and fracture of materials can be revealed.