

Author: Gadow R. Riegert-Escribano M. Buchmann M.
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 1059-9630
Source: Journal of Thermal Spray Technology, Vol.14, Iss.1, 2005-03, pp. : 100-108
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Abstract
Residual stresses are related to the thermophysical properties of substrate and coating materials and occur after the coated component has undergone thermal spraying and machining processes. All residual stresses in layer composites result from different individual stress mechanisms occurring during the manufacturing process, mainly based on heat and mass transfer during the coating deposition. Using the hole-milling-and-drilling method, residual stress fields can be measured in a quasi-nondestructive way over the drilling depth with appropriate resolution. In several drilling and milling operations, a cylindrically shaped hole is brought step by step into the component surface. The residual stresses are locally relieved due to material removal, deform the surface around the drilled microhole, and are measured by high-resolution measurement tools (e.g., strain gages (DMS)), for every drilling step in the form of relaxed surface strains. Using calibration curves and material data (
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