Residual Stresses
Residual Stresses
Residual Stresses
Residual stresses are stresses that remain in a solid material after the original cause of the
stresses has been removed. Residual stress may be desirable or undesirable. For example, laser
peening imparts deep beneficial compressive residual stresses into metal components such as
turbine engine fan blades, and it is used in toughened glass to allow for large, thin, crack- and
scratch-resistant glass displays on smartphones. However, unintended residual stress in a designed
structure may cause it to fail prematurely.
Macro-residual stresses are developed in several grains. Any change in the equilibrium of Type-
1 residual stress will result in a change in macroscopic dimensions. Any treatment or process
which causes inhomogeneous distribution of strains produces Type-1 residual stresses.
Residual stresses arise whenever a component is stressed beyond its elastic limit and
plastic deformation occurs. Plastic deformation occurs when the stress exceeds a
metal’s yield strength (discussed in Tensile Testing). This can be as a result of…
Residual stresses that arise during a phase transformation are due to the volume
For phase transformations that occur during cooling from an elevated temperature, such
as in steel, the outer portions of the metal cool first and undergo the phase
transformation first. If the volume of the new phase is different from the volume of the
initial phase, then the transformed volume of metal will change as the new phase
forms. As the interior of the metal cools it will also try to increase or decrease in
volume. However, the volume change of the metal interior will be constrained by the
cooler outer layer of metal that has already transformed.
When the volume of the new phase is larger than the volume of the initial phase, the
For example, during through hardening of steel during a quench, austenite transforms to
martensite, with the martensite having a volume that is about 4% greater than
austenite. During the quench, the steel at the surface transforms to martensite first
since the surface cools the fastest. As the metal at the interior continues to cool, it
transforms to martensite. However, its volume expansion is restricted by the hardened,
cooler surface layer. This restraint causes the interior to be under compression and the
outer surface under tension (see Metallurgy of Steel Through Hardening).
In some conditions, the volume changes can produce residual stresses large enough to
cause plastic deformation, leading to component warping or distortion. With severe
quenching the quenching stresses can be so large that they cause cracking.
Residual stresses also arise when plastic deformation is non-uniform through the cross-
section of an item being deformed such as during bending, drawing, rolling, and
extruding. When a metal undergoes plastic deformation, a portion of the deformation is
elastic (discussed in Tensile Testing). After the load causing the deformation is
removed, the metal tries to recover the elastic portion of the deformation. However, the
elastic recovery is incomplete because it is opposed by the adjacent plastically
deformed material.
Consider a metal item that has been bent. Regions adjacent to the bend will have been
only elastically deformed, and this
In general, the sign of the residual stress produced by non-uniform deformation will be
opposite the sign of the plastic deformation which produced the residual stress
Surface residual compressive stresses are generally helpful because they reduce the
effects of applied tensile stresses. In most cases, surface compressive stresses
contribute to the improvement of fatigue strength and resistance to stress-corrosion
cracking.
Controlling the type and magnitude of residual stress is important for applications in
which components will be exposed to fatigue or stress corrosion cracking conditions or
if the residual stresses are large enough to cause component deformation or cracking.
This can be achieved through mechanical treatment, stress relief heat treatment, control
of heat treating processes, and alloy selection.
Mechanical treatments such as shot peening, light cold rolling, stretching, and small
amounts of compressing are used to intentionally induce a compressive residual stress
at the surface of a component.
Because metal yield strength decreases as its temperature increases, metals can be
stress relieved by heating to a temperature where the yield strength of the metal is the
same or less than the magnitude of the residual stress. At this temperature, the metal
can undergo microscopic plastic deformation, thus releasing at least a portion of the
residual stress. After stress relieving, the maximum residual stress that can remain is
equal to the yield strength of the material at the stress-relieving temperature.