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failure
A general term used to imply that a part in service
(1) has become completely inoperable, (2) is still operable but is
incapable of satisfactorily performing its intended function, or (3) has
deteriorated seriously, to the point that it has become unreliable or
unsafe for continued use.
Faraday's
law
(1) The amount of any substance dissolved or deposited
in electrolysis is proportional to the total electric charge passed. (2)
The amounts of different substances dissolved or deposited by the passage
of the same electric charge are proportional to their equivalent weights.
fatigue
The phenomenon leading to fracture under repeated or
fluctuating stresses having a maximum value less than the tensile strength
of the material. Fatigue fractures are progressive and grow under the
action of the fluctuating stress.
fatigue
crack growth rate
The rate of crack extension caused by
constant-amplitude fatigue loading, expressed in terms of crack extension
per cycle of load application.
fatigue
life
The number of cycles of stress that can be sustained
prior to failure under a stated test condition.
fatigue
limit
The maximum stress that presumably leads to fatigue
fracture in a specified number of stress cycles. If the stress is not
completely reversed. the value of the mean stress. the minimum stress, or
the stress ratio should also be stated. Compare with endurance limit.
fatigue
strength
The maximum stress that can be sustained for a
specified number of cycles without failure, the stress being completely
reversed within each cycle unless otherwise staled.
Ferritic
Pertaining to the body-centered cubic crystal
structure (BCC) of many ferrous (iron-base) metals.
ferrite
(1) A solid solution of one or more elements in
body-centered cubic iron. Unless otherwise designated (for instance, as
chromium ferrite), the solute is generally assumed to be carbon. On some
equilibrium diagrams, there are two ferrite regions separated by an
austenite area. The lower area is alpha ferrite; the upper, delta ferrite.
If there is no designation, alpha ferrite is assumed. (2) ln the held of
magnetics, substances having the general formula: M2+O . M23+O3,
the trivalent metal often being iron.
filiform
corrosion
Corrosion that occurs under some coatings in the form
of randomly distributed threadlike filaments.
film
A thin, not necessarily visible, layer of material.
fish
eyes
Areas on a steel fracture surface having a
characteristic white crystalline appearance.
flakes
Short, discontinuous internal fissures in wrought
metals attributed to stresses produced by localized transformation and
decreased solubility of hydrogen during cooling after hot working. In a
fracture surface. flakes appear as bright silvery areas; on an etched
surface, they appear as short, discontinuous cracks. Also called shatter
cracks or snow flakes.
flame
spraying
Thermal spraying in which coating material is
fed into an oxyfuel gas flame, where it is melted. Compressed gas may or
may not be used to atomize the coating material and propel it onto the
substrate.
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Fogged
Metal
A metal whose luster has been reduced because of a
surface film, usually a corrosion product layer.
foreign
structure
Any metallic structure that is not intended as part of
a cathodic protection system of interest.
fouling
An accumulation of deposits. This term includes
accumulation and growth of marine organisms on a submerged metal surface
and also includes the accumulation of deposits (usually inorganic) on heat
exchanger tubing.
fouling
organism
Any aquatic organism with a sessile adult stage that
attaches to and fouls underwater structures of ships.
fractography
Descriptive treatment of fracture, especially in
metals, with specific reference to photographs of the fracture surface.
Macrofractography involves photographs at low magnification (< 25x);
microfractography, photographs at high magnification (>25x)
fracture
mechanics
A quantitative analysis for evaluating structural
behavior in terms of applied stress, crack length, and specimen or machine
component geometry. See also linear elastic fracture mechanics.
fracture
toughness
A generic term for measures of resistance to extension
of a crack. The term is sometimes restricted to results of fracture mechanics
tests, which are directly applicable in fracture control. However, the
term commonly includes results from simple tests of notched or precracked
specimens not based on fracture mechanics analysis. Results from test of
the latter type are often useful for fracture control, based on either
service experience or empirical correlations with fracture mechanics tests.
See also stress-intensity factor.
free
carbon
The part of the total carbon in steel or cast
iron that is present in elemental form as graphite or temper carbon.
Contrast with combined carbon.
free
corrosion potential
Corrosion potential in the absence of net
electrical current flowing to or from the metal surface.
free
ferrite
Ferrire that is formed directly from the decomposition of
hypoeutectoid austenite during cooling, without the simultaneous formation
of cementite. Also called proeutectoid ferrite.
free
machining
Pertains to the machining characteristics of an alloy
to which one or more ingredients have been introduced to give small broken
chips, lower power consumption, better surface finish, and longer tool
life; among such additions are sulfur or lead to steel, lead to brass, lead
and bismuth to aluminum, and sulfur or selenium to stainless steel.
fretting
A type of wear that occurs between tight-fitting
surfaces subjected to cyclic relative motion of extremely small amplitude.
Usually, fretting is accompanied by corrosion, especially of the very fine
wear debris.
fretting
corrosion
The accelerated deterioration at the interface between
contacting surfaces as the result of corrosion and slight oscillatory
movement between the two surfaces; Deterioration at the interface between
two contacting surfaces accelerated by relative motion between them of
sufficient amplitude to produce slip.
furan
Resin formed from reactions involving furfuryl alcohol
alone or in combination with other constituents.
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