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Tutorial: Microstructure-Based Failure Analysis of a Failed Gear

📅 March 25, 2026 ⏱ 46 min read 👤 metallurgyzone 🏷 case depth   failure analysis tutorial   gear failure  
March 25, 2026 · 14 min read · Tutorials

Tutorial: Gear Failure Analysis — Pitting, Bending Fatigue, Scuffing and Case Depth Investigation

Gears are among the most demanding tribological components in mechanical engineering. The gear tooth surface must simultaneously resist contact fatigue (Hertz stress up to 1500–2000 MPa at the pitch line), bending fatigue at the root fillet, adhesive wear during sliding contact at the addendum and dedendum, and occasional shock overloads, all within the constraints of a carburised case of 0.7–2.0 mm depth over a tough ferritic core. When a gear fails, the failure mode — whether pitting, bending fracture, spalling, scuffing, or overload — contains encoded information about the root cause: insufficient case depth, grinding burn, lubricant failure, design overload, or manufacturing defect. This tutorial provides a systematic, step-by-step methodology for conducting a microstructure-based gear failure investigation from receipt of the failed component through root cause identification and corrective action specification.

Key Takeaways
  • Never clean a failed gear before macroscopic examination: lubricant residue, wear debris, and fracture surface morphology provide critical diagnostic information that is destroyed by cleaning.
  • The failure mode (pitting, bending fatigue, scuffing, spalling, overload) determines the root cause category: pitting → contact stress or case depth; bending → stress concentration or core hardness; scuffing → lubrication; overload → design or abuse.
  • Effective case depth (ECD) is measured to the 550 HV1 hardness criterion per ISO 2639; a hardness traverse from surface to core is mandatory in every gear failure investigation involving a surface-hardened component.
  • Retained austenite above 25% in the case reduces bending fatigue resistance; below 15% may reduce contact fatigue resistance. XRD (ASTM E975) is the quantitative measurement method.
  • Grinding burn — indicated by dark-etching overtempering zones or white-etching rehardened layers — introduces tensile residual stress at the surface that drastically accelerates both bending and contact fatigue.
  • The Hertz contact stress (p0 = W / (π × b × L)) governs pitting initiation; comparing the calculated contact stress against the material’s allowable contact stress from AGMA 2101 or ISO 6336 is a critical step in determining whether pitting was caused by overload, material deficiency, or normal service progression.
Gear Contact Stress & Case Depth Assessment Calculator
Hertz contact stress (cylindrical contact) • ECD check • Bending stress estimate

Line-contact (cylindrical gear) Hertz contact stress. Inputs in SI units.

Rₑ = (R₁ × R₂)/(R₁ + R₂) | R = r × sinφ

Check effective case depth adequacy per AGMA 2101 / ISO 6336-5. Enter measured and required ECD.

Lewis bending stress estimate. Simple beam model for quick root-cause comparison.

Gear Tooth Cross-Section: Failure Zones and Case-Core Hardness Profile ADDENDUM Pitch circle DEDENDUM Root fillet Root fillet Bending fatigue Origin at root fillet Contact fatigue Pitting near pitch line Scuffing Tip & root flank Case Core Hardness-Depth Profile (Carburised & Quenched gear tooth) 200 350 450 550 650 750 850 HV Hardness (HV1) 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.4 2.0mm Depth from surface (mm) 550 HV (ECD limit) ECD ≈ 1.0 mm ECD ≈ 0.65mm Adequate case (ECD ≈ 1.0 mm) Insufficient case (ECD ≈ 0.65 mm)
Fig. 1 — Left: Gear tooth cross-section showing the carburised case (amber shading), core, and the principal failure zone locations: bending fatigue at the root fillet (red oval), contact fatigue/pitting near the pitch line (orange annotation), and scuffing at the addendum/dedendum flanks (amber). The pitch circle line is shown as a red dashed horizontal. Right: Hardness-depth profile showing adequate case depth (blue curve, ECD ≈ 1.0 mm to 550 HV1 criterion) vs. insufficient case depth (red dashed, ECD ≈ 0.65 mm), both for a carburised and quenched gear. The 550 HV1 ECD limit per ISO 2639 is the horizontal red line. © metallurgyzone.com

Step 1: Receipt, Documentation, and Initial Macroscopic Examination

The investigation begins before any sample is sectioned or cleaned. The condition of the failed component as received encodes critical forensic information that is irreversible once lost.

Photograph as-received
Complete set of photographs before any handling: gear in situ if possible, overall orientation, tooth numbering sequence, fracture surfaces, all damaged zones.
Record lubricant condition
Collect lubricant sample from housing: viscosity, particle count (ISO 4406), spectrometric analysis for wear metals, water content, acid number.
Measure operating geometry
Tooth profile deviation (CMM or gear tester), runout, centre distance, bearing clearances. Compare to design drawing — deviations indicate root causes.
Classify failure mode
Identify primary failure mode per AGMA 1010-F14: pitting, bending fracture, scuffing, wear, or overload. Location on tooth (pitch line, root fillet, flank) is diagnostic.
Hardness survey (field)
Portable Vickers or Equotip hardness measurement on tooth flank and adjacent undamaged areas. Gross hardness shortfall detectable at this stage.
Dimensional inspection
Measure tooth thickness, tip diameter, and fillet radius on undamaged teeth. Compare to specification. Undercut or excessive stock removal during grinding can initiate bending fatigue.
Critical: Do not clean the gear before examination. Lubricant residue, metallic wear particles, corrosion products, and debris embedded in pits or fracture surfaces are direct evidence of the failure mechanism and operating environment. Cleaning destroys this evidence permanently. If cleaning is absolutely necessary for safety or handling, preserve a lubricant sample and photograph all surfaces in detail first. Never use acid cleaning, abrasive blasting, or ultrasonics before documenting all fracture surfaces.

Step 2: Failure Mode Classification

Accurate failure mode classification from macroscopic examination is the central diagnostic step — it determines the root cause category and dictates which metallurgical investigations are required. The six primary gear failure modes have characteristic macroscopic signatures.

Bending Fatigue
Location: Root fillet • AGMA 1010: Section 7
Progressive crack from root fillet at highest bending stress concentration. Fracture surface shows smooth beach marks (fatigue zone) transitioning to rough final fracture. Single or multiple crack origins. Often initiates at surface discontinuities (grinding marks, corrosion pits, grinding burn).
Contact Fatigue (Pitting)
Location: Pitch line / flank • AGMA 1010: Section 6
Small hemispherical or irregular pits (0.1–5 mm) on tooth flank, concentrated near the pitch line. Progressive pitting coalesces and enlarges. Subsurface crack initiates at inclusion stringers or at maximum shear stress (typically 0.1–0.3 mm below pitch-line surface).
Spalling (Case Crushing)
Location: Flank • AGMA 1010: Section 6.4
Large-scale flaking of case material (5–25 mm patches). Typically caused by insufficient case depth or inadequate case-core transition hardness: subsurface shear stress maximum lies below the hardened case, initiating cracks in softer core at the case-core boundary.
Scuffing (Scoring)
Location: Addendum/dedendum • AGMA 1010: Section 4
Rough, torn surface texture with directionality in the sliding direction (addendum–dedendum). Material transfer between meshing surfaces visible. Results from EHD film breakdown and adhesive welding at asperity contacts. Highest sliding velocity = most severe at tooth tips and roots.
Abrasive Wear
Location: Whole flank • AGMA 1010: Section 3
Fine parallel scratches (abrasion tracks) in the sliding direction across the entire tooth flank. Gradual profile modification. Caused by hard particles in the lubricant — contamination, wear debris from bearings, or inadequate filtration. Lubricant analysis (ISO 4406) is diagnostic.
Overload Fracture
Location: Root • AGMA 1010: Section 8
Single-event catastrophic tooth fracture. Fracture surface is rough, fibrous, with shear lip at one face and no or minimal beach marks. Occurs when applied load exceeds ultimate bending strength. Root causes: shock loading, gear jam, foreign object, or severe design overload.

Reading the Fracture Surface: Fatigue vs. Overload

The single most important diagnostic distinction is between fatigue fracture and overload fracture on a gear tooth. Fatigue fracture develops progressively over many load cycles with three characteristic zones visible on the fracture surface:

  • Fatigue origin: A relatively smooth, thumbnail-shaped area at or near the surface at the highest stress concentration (typically the compressive/tensile transition at the root fillet). Multiple origins (ratchet marks) indicate high applied stress relative to material strength. A single, small origin indicates lower stress with a specific local stress concentrator (pit, nick, grinding mark).
  • Fatigue propagation zone: Smooth, flat surface with concentric beach marks (arrest lines) showing the crack front positions at different stages of growth. The spacing of beach marks indicates relative crack growth rate per load block. Under magnification (SEM), striations at nanometre spacing are visible on the fracture surface, with one striation per load cycle.
  • Final fracture zone: Rough, irregular surface where the remaining cross-section was insufficient to carry the applied load and failed by ductile tearing (fibrous, dull) or brittle cleavage (crystalline, reflective). The relative size of the fatigue zone to the final fracture zone inversely indicates the applied stress: large fatigue zone + small final fracture = low applied stress (material fatigue limit was marginally exceeded); small fatigue zone + large final fracture = high applied stress (single or few overload cycles).

Step 3: Material and Hardness Verification

Before any sectioning, verify that the gear material and heat treatment meet specification. This eliminates or confirms material-related root causes.

Standard material requirements for carburised transmission gears:

Typical steel grades for carburised gears:
  Automotive:   SAE 8620, SAE 4120, 20MnCrS5 (ISO 683-17)
  Industrial:   20MnCr5, 17CrNiMo6, SAE 9310 (aerospace)
  Heavy duty:   EN36C (En36C), SAE 4820

Carburised and case-hardened (per AGMA 2101 / ISO 6336-5 MQ grade):
  Surface hardness:       58–62 HRC (700–750 HV1) on tooth flank
  Core hardness:          30–42 HRC (300–415 HV) (or per drawing)
  Effective case depth:   Per gear module and application (see table below)

AGMA 2101 minimum ECD guidelines vs. normal diametral pitch:
  Module 1.5–3: ECD 0.3–0.6 mm
  Module 3–5:   ECD 0.5–1.0 mm
  Module 5–8:   ECD 0.8–1.5 mm
  Module 8–12:  ECD 1.2–2.0 mm

Verification tests on retained material:
  1. OES spectrometry — verify alloy chemistry vs. mill certificate
  2. Cross-sectional hardness traverse (HV0.5 at 0.1mm intervals)
  3. Case depth measurement to 550 HV1 (ECD) and core hardness (TCD)
  4. Metallographic examination — retained austenite estimate (etching)
  5. XRD retained austenite (ASTM E975) — quantitative measurement
Measurement Method Standard Acceptable Range (typical) Failure Indicator
Surface hardness (flank)HV1 Vickers (converted to HRC)ISO 6507 / ASTM E92700–800 HV1 (58–64 HRC)<650 HV1: undercarburised or grinding burn temper
Core hardnessHV10 at >3× ECD from surfaceISO 6507300–420 HV10 (30–42 HRC)<280 HV10: under-strength core; >450 HV10: too hard/brittle core
Effective case depth (ECD)Hardness traverse to 550 HV1ISO 2639Per AGMA 2101 / drawingECD < minimum spec: spalling and contact fatigue risk
Retained austeniteXRD 4-peak methodASTM E97515–25 vol% at surface>30%: reduced bending fatigue; <10%: risk of brittle surface
IGO depth (intergranular oxidation)Metallographic, nital etchAMS 2759/7<25 µm (typical max)>25 µm: reduces bending fatigue initiation resistance at surface
Prior austenite grain sizeASTM E112 grain countASTM E112ASTM 7–10 (<30 µm)ASTM <6 (>45 µm): reduced toughness; coarse carburising
Surface carbon contentCombustion analysis on case shavingsASTM E10180.75–0.95 wt% C at surface>1.0%: carbide network (embrittling); <0.7%: low hardness

Step 4: Metallographic Investigation

Metallographic sectioning provides the definitive structural evidence for failure cause. Two section planes are required: a longitudinal section through the tooth (perpendicular to flank surface through tooth centreline) and, for fatigue failures, a section through the fracture plane from the origin region.

Section Preparation Protocol

  1. Preserve fracture surface: Before sectioning adjacent to a fracture, cast the fracture surface in epoxy or vacuum-impregnate to preserve crack morphology and any debris embedded in the fracture. Never grind or polish a fracture surface that needs SEM examination.
  2. Mark the section location: Mark the cutting plane on the tooth surface with an indelible marker before sawing. Record the distance from a reference feature (tooth centre, pitch line) to ensure the section is taken through the intended location.
  3. Cut with appropriate tool: Abrasive cut-off wheel with continuous water coolant at low feed rate to minimise cutting heat. For precision sections adjacent to the failure surface, use a low-speed diamond saw. Overheating during cutting can produce a false grinding burn signature.
  4. Mount in conductive phenolic or epoxy resin: Edge retention is critical for surface hardness measurement. Use epoxy + alumina filler for maximum edge retention, or ensure phenolic resin completely supports the section edge.
  5. Polish through 400, 600, 1200 grit SiC, then 6, 3, 1 µm diamond: Final polish with 0.05 µm colloidal silica or alumina. The section must be flat and scratch-free for accurate microhardness indentation.
  6. Etch with 2% nital for 5–15 seconds: Reveals martensite, retained austenite (white, unetched), carbides (dark), grain boundaries, IGO, and any grinding burn zones (dark bands near surface).

Microstructural Features and Their Significance

Microstructural Feature Etching Response (2% nital) Significance Quantification
Tempered martensite (case)Lightly etched, needle-like substructureCorrect heat treatment; basis of high hardnessHardness HV1; lath width by SEM
Retained austeniteWhite (unetched) regions between martensite lathsModerate RA beneficial; excessive reduces fatigue strengthXRD (ASTM E975) for quantification; visually estimate distribution
Carbide network at grain boundariesDark angular/continuous films at grain boundariesOver-carburising signature; severe embrittlementDescribe as continuous/discontinuous; measure carbide film thickness
Intergranular oxidation (IGO)Dark intergranular network at surface (5–30 µm)Inherent carburising process artefact; reduces surface bending fatigueMeasure maximum depth per AMS 2759/7
Grinding burn (temper)Dark etching bands or patches parallel to surfaceOvertempering from grinding heat; reduces hardness and introduces tensile residual stressMap extent and depth; measure hardness drop within zone
Grinding burn (rehardening)White etching layer (WEL) at surface, 10–100 µmVery hard (>800 HV) but brittle; tensile residual stress; immediate crack initiation siteMeasure WEL thickness; confirm by nanoindentation
DecarburisationLight-etching surface layer with ferrite grainsLoss of surface carbon during heat treatment; reduced hardness and fatigue strengthMeasure depth to specified surface carbon content per ASTM E1019
Core microstructureTempered martensite + bainite (medium-alloy) or ferrite + pearlite (low-alloy)Controls core strength; fully martensitic core preferred for high-performance gearsHardness HV10; estimate martensite fraction

Step 5: Contact Stress Analysis and the Pitting Mechanism

When pitting is the primary failure mode, a quantitative contact stress calculation is essential to determine whether pitting occurred within the design envelope (progressive pitting from acceptable service) or resulted from overload, material deficiency, or lubricant failure. The Hertz contact stress for a spur gear tooth-on-tooth contact approximates cylindrical line contact:

Hertz contact stress — cylindrical contact (spur gear approximation):

Contact half-width b:
  b = √(4 × W × R_e / (π × L × E'))

Peak contact pressure p₀:
  p₀ = 2 × W / (π × b × L)     or equivalently
  p₀ = √(W × E' / (π × R_e × L))

Where:
  W   = normal load (N)
  L   = face width (contact length) (m)
  R_e = equivalent (reduced) radius (m)
       R_e = (R₁ × R₂) / (R₁ + R₂)
       R₁, R₂ = radii of curvature at pitch point of pinion and gear
       = r₁ × sinφ, r₂ × sinφ   (r = pitch circle radius, φ = pressure angle)
  E'  = reduced elastic modulus = 2 / [(1−ν₁²)/E₁ + (1−ν₂²)/E₂]

Subsurface shear stress maximum (initiates pitting):
  τ_max ≈ 0.304 × p₀   at depth z ≈ 0.48 × b below surface
  (This is the von Mises max shear stress for line contact)

Contact fatigue limit for carburised steel (AGMA 2101-D04):
  σ_c,allow = σ_c,lim × Z_N × Z_W / (S_H × K_T × K_R)
  σ_c,lim for carburised gear (Grade 3 material): ~1700 MPa (250 ksi)
  → If calculated p₀ > σ_c,allow: pitting is expected (overload or insufficient case)
  → If p₀ < σ_c,allow: look for material defects, lubricant failure, or subsurface inclusions

Subsurface Crack Initiation in Contact Fatigue

The classical contact fatigue mechanism initiates at the depth of maximum orthogonal shear stress, typically 0.1–0.3 mm below the pitch-line surface. The physical mechanism involves:

  1. Cyclic loading produces shear stress reversals in the subsurface material beneath the Hertz contact ellipse. For spur gears, the maximum orthogonal shear stress (reversing) is approximately 0.25 × p₀ at depth 0.5b; the maximum von Mises shear stress is approximately 0.30 × p₀ at depth 0.48b.
  2. At hard inclusions (MnS, Al₂O₃ stringers) or in regions of retained austenite, stress concentration causes early crack nucleation at or just below the depth of maximum shear stress.
  3. The crack propagates at an angle of approximately 20–40° to the surface under mixed-mode (Mode I + Mode II) loading, driven by the combined effect of contact stress and EHD lubricant pressure pumping into the crack on each load cycle.
  4. When the crack intersects the surface or connects to an adjacent crack, a pit spalls out. The characteristic pit shape (deeper at the leading edge, shallower at the trailing edge relative to the sliding direction) reveals the crack growth direction and lubricant pumping mechanism.
Distinguishing fatigue pitting from corrosion pitting: Fatigue pits have angular walls with a characteristic crystallographic fracture texture inside the pit. They are surrounded by smooth, undeformed metal and are concentrated near the pitch line where contact stress is highest. Corrosion pits from water contamination or acid lubricant breakdown are more uniformly distributed across the tooth flank, have rounded walls, and may show corrosion products (red-brown iron oxides, white zinc stearates) inside the pit. Mixed corrosion-fatigue pitting occurs when corrosion pits act as stress concentrators that initiate contact fatigue cracks, producing angular pits distributed across a corroded background.

Step 6: Grinding Burn Detection and Residual Stress

Grinding burn is one of the most common and damaging root causes of premature gear failure, and one of the most frequently missed during incoming inspection because it is invisible to conventional hardness testing unless the hardness drop is severe. It requires targeted metallographic investigation at every gear failure analysis.

Etching Protocol for Grinding Burn Detection

The standard field method uses modified Barkhausen noise measurement, but the laboratory confirmation uses a controlled nital etch sequence:

  1. Polish the tooth flank section to 1 µm diamond finish.
  2. Etch with 4% nital for 30 seconds, then wash and dry immediately. In a grinding burn-affected zone, dark (overtempering) or white (rehardening) regions appear against the background of normally etched tempered martensite.
  3. Re-polish to remove the etch (remove ~2–5 µm), and measure Vickers microhardness HV0.1 at 0.02 mm intervals in the surface zone. A hardness drop of more than 50 HV compared to adjacent undamaged material is diagnostic of temper burn. A hardness increase above 800 HV combined with a white etching layer indicates rehardening burn.
  4. Apply acid ammonium persulfate (10% w/v, aqueous) for deeper-etching contrast of the white-etching rehardened layer if present. Alternatively, alkaline potassium permanganate solution (3 g KMnO₄ + 25 g KOH / 100 mL water) preferentially darkens the rehardened layer.
Grinding burn and residual stress reversal: Properly carburised, quenched, and tempered gears carry compressive residual stresses at the tooth surface of approximately −200 to −500 MPa from the volume expansion of martensite transformation. These compressive stresses are beneficial: they must be overcome by the applied tensile stress before fatigue crack initiation can begin, effectively raising the fatigue limit. Grinding burn at temperatures above the tempering temperature (typically 150–180°C for gear steels) causes volume contraction of the overtempering zone, introducing tensile residual stresses of +100 to +400 MPa at the surface — precisely the opposite of what is needed. The combined effect of reduced hardness, reduced compressive residual stress, and potentially a new crack initiation site in the ground surface can reduce the bending fatigue limit by 30–50%.

Step 7: Root Cause Analysis and Fishbone Diagram

Root cause analysis (RCA) for gear failures uses the evidence assembled in Steps 1–6 to trace from the observed failure mode back to the fundamental cause through a structured logic tree. The five root cause categories for gear failures follow the 5M structure (Material, Manufacturing, Maintenance, Misuse, Design):

Failure Mode Material Root Causes Manufacturing Root Causes Service/Maintenance Root Causes Design Root Causes
Bending fatigueWrong alloy; insufficient core hardenability; excessive inclusions; seamsGrinding burn; insufficient ECD at root; undercut; surface roughness > Ra 0.8 µm at rootShock loading; misalignment; fretting at root from oscillationInsufficient root radius; too thin tooth; stress concentration factor underestimated
Contact fatigue (pitting)ECD below minimum; RA >30%; surface hardness < 58 HRC; inclusion stringers below pitch lineInadequate carburising time/temperature; quench distortion producing concentrated contact; surface finish Ra > 0.4 µmOverload; lubricant contamination or viscosity too low; water ingress; loss of EHD filmContact stress above allowable for material grade; insufficient case depth specification
SpallingInsufficient ECD for gear module; abrupt case-core hardness transition; soft core (<28 HRC)Low carburising temperature; short cycle; gear not reaching temperature uniformlyShock overload; abrupt load application; debris under contactContact stress above case-core transition limit; case depth under-specified
ScuffingInsufficient surface hardness; porous surface from carburising anomalySurface finish too rough (Ra > 0.6 µm); tooth profile error concentrating contactWrong lubricant viscosity; lubricant starvation; excessive speed/temperature; cold start overloadSpecific film thickness λ < 1.5; inadequate surface finish specification
Overload fractureMaterial below minimum core hardness; pre-existing crack or seamQuench crack at root; grinding crack; heat treatment distortion causing tight meshForeign object; gear jam; emergency stop; abuse beyond design envelopeInadequate tooth strength for peak load; insufficient service factor KA
Worked Case Study — Industrial Gearbox Pitting Failure Investigation

Background

A 17CrNiMo6 carburised helical gear (module 6, 28 teeth, face width 80 mm) in an industrial cement mill gearbox failed after 8,200 hours service (expected life: 40,000 hours). The failure was reported as “noise and vibration” during routine monitoring. Upon disassembly, progressive pitting was found across 12 tooth flanks covering the dedendum and pitch-line region of the pinion, with several pits coalesced into spalled areas of approximately 15 × 8 mm. No tooth fractures were present.

Investigation Findings

Macroscopic examination showed pitting concentrated at 3–4 mm below the pitch line (in the active dedendum), with pit depths of 0.5–2 mm. Lubricant analysis showed ISO VG 220 mineral oil with water contamination of 1,800 ppm (limit: 200 ppm) and particle count at ISO 4406 class 21/19/15 (limit: 17/15/12).

Metallographic cross-sections at mid-flank through representative pits showed:

  • ECD measured: 0.72 mm (to 550 HV1). Specified minimum: 0.90 mm for module 6. Non-conformance: ECD 20% below minimum.
  • Surface hardness: 698 HV1 (58.0 HRC) — within specification (58–62 HRC).
  • Retained austenite by XRD: 31% at surface — above the typical 25% maximum for this application.
  • Crack morphology: Cracks initiated at approximately 0.5 mm below the pitch-line surface (at the subsurface shear stress maximum for the calculated Hertz contact stress of p₀ = 1580 MPa), consistent with fatigue pit growth from the subsurface toward the surface.
  • No grinding burn, carbide network, or decarburisation detected.

Contact Stress Calculation

Operating load W/L = 640 N/mm; Re = 22.4 mm; E′ = 228 GPa. Hertz contact stress p₀ = 1580 MPa. AGMA allowable contact stress (σc,allow) for 17CrNiMo6 Grade 2 material at calculated life: 1510 MPa. The applied contact stress exceeded the allowable by approximately 4.6% — marginal overload that would not by itself cause premature failure in the specified timeline, but combined with the insufficient case depth, made the tooth subsurface vulnerable at depths shallower than the intended maximum-shear-stress location.

Root Cause and Corrective Action

Primary root cause: Insufficient effective case depth (0.72 mm measured vs. 0.90 mm specified), reducing the shielding provided by the hardened case over the subsurface shear stress maximum and allowing crack initiation in sub-specification case material. Contributing cause: High retained austenite (31%) reducing the bending and contact fatigue limit of the case. Secondary contributing cause: Water contamination in the lubricant, which reduces EHD film viscosity, lowers the specific film thickness λ, and promotes corrosion-assisted crack growth in existing pits.

Corrective actions: (1) 100% ECD verification by hardness traverse on all future gear batches before installation, with sampling per ANSI/AGMA 2004-C08. (2) Revision of carburising cycle to achieve target ECD of 0.90–1.05 mm, with increased soaking time confirmed by process coupons. (3) Retained austenite specification tightened to 15–25% maximum, verified by XRD on each batch. (4) Installation of magnetic return-line filter (β₃ ≥ 200) and oil sampling interval reduced from 6-month to 3-month. (5) Inspection for water ingress at shaft seal and breather arrangement.

Contact Fatigue Mechanism and Case Depth Quality Comparison Subsurface Pitting Initiation Mechanism GEAR TOOTH SURFACE p₀ (Hertz) Case Core τ_max z ≈ 0.48b incl. Crack path ~20-40° Pit ~1.0 mm (ECD) Crack initiates at τ_max depth → propagates to surface → spalls as pit Case Quality Comparison (HV vs. Depth) 200 350 500 630 750 850 HV Hardness (HV1) 0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.6 2.0mm Depth from surface (mm) 550HV ECD Temper ECD ECD 1.1mm 0.75mm Adequate case (ECD 1.1 mm) Insufficient case (ECD 0.75 mm) Grinding burn (temper zone at surf.)
Fig. 2 — Left: Subsurface contact fatigue (pitting) initiation mechanism. The Hertz contact pressure p₀ (blue) creates a shear stress field with maximum τmax at depth z ≈ 0.48b (red oval). Fatigue crack nucleates at an inclusion at this depth, propagates at ≈20–40° to the surface, and eventually coalesces with the surface to form a pit. Right: Hardness-depth profiles comparing three case conditions: adequate case depth (ECD 1.1 mm, green); insufficient case depth (ECD 0.75 mm, orange dashed) — both the Hertz shear stress maximum and the ECD criterion fall in the weaker sub-case zone; grinding burn (red short-dashed) showing a temper zone near the surface where hardness drops significantly before recovering with depth. © metallurgyzone.com

Step 8: Report Structure and Corrective Action Specification

The failure analysis report must present findings in a structured format that enables a non-specialist reader to understand the conclusion while providing sufficient technical depth for a metallurgist or gear engineer to verify the analysis. The ASTM E2677 standard format for failure analysis reports provides the recommended structure:

  1. Executive Summary: One page. Failure mode, root cause, and top three corrective actions. Written for management and decision-makers.
  2. Background and Objectives: Component description, service history, operating conditions, failure description, and scope of investigation.
  3. Investigation Methods: Techniques used, standards applied, equipment specifications. Enables third-party verification.
  4. Results: Factual presentation of all findings — macroscopic examination, hardness data, metallographic observations, chemical analysis, contact stress calculations. Tables and figures referenced in text. No conclusions in this section.
  5. Discussion: Interpretation of findings. How each piece of evidence supports or eliminates each potential root cause. Quantitative comparison of calculated contact stress vs. allowable, measured ECD vs. specified ECD, retained austenite vs. limits, etc.
  6. Conclusions: Definitive statement of failure mode and root cause. Primary and contributing causes clearly differentiated. Conservative language if evidence is incomplete.
  7. Recommendations: Specific, actionable corrective actions assigned to responsible functions (manufacturing, design, maintenance) with priority and target completion date.

For the metallurgical underpinnings of this tutorial, see the Martensite Formation in Steel article for the microstructural basis of case hardness, Quenching and Tempering for tempering response and retained austenite control, and Hardness Testing Methods for the full methodology of microhardness traverses and conversion to HRC. The Charpy Impact Test and Mechanical Testing articles cover companion characterisation methods used in gear material qualification.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main failure modes of carburised gear teeth?
The primary failure modes of carburised steel gear teeth are: (1) Bending fatigue — progressive crack growth from the root fillet under repeated bending stress, with smooth beach marks on the fracture surface propagating from a subsurface initiation site. (2) Contact fatigue (pitting) — small spalls initiating at or just below the pitch line under Hertz contact stress, classified as initial, progressive, or destructive pitting. (3) Spalling — large-scale flaking of case from insufficient case depth or inadequate case-core transition hardness. (4) Scuffing (scoring) — adhesive wear from metal-to-metal contact when the EHD lubricant film breaks down, producing welding and tearing at asperity contacts. (5) Abrasive wear — gradual material removal by hard particles in the lubricant. (6) Overload fracture — single-event fracture with rough fibrous fracture surface when load exceeds ultimate strength.
How do you measure effective case depth (ECD) in a carburised gear?
Effective case depth (ECD) is defined per ISO 2639 as the perpendicular distance from the gear tooth surface to the point where hardness equals 550 HV1. The measurement procedure: (1) Section the gear tooth perpendicular to the tooth surface at mid-face width. (2) Polish to metallographic finish and etch with 2% nital. (3) Apply Vickers microhardness indents (HV0.5 or HV1 load) at 0.1–0.2 mm intervals from the surface toward the core, starting 0.05–0.1 mm from the surface to avoid edge effects. (4) Plot the hardness-depth profile and read the depth at which hardness crosses 550 HV1. Total case depth (TCD) is measured to where hardness is indistinguishable from core hardness. For gear root fillets, a separate traverse is required because root case depth is typically 30–50% shallower than on the flank.
What microstructural features indicate grinding burn in a gear tooth?
Grinding burn has two microstructural forms. Temper burn: localised dark-etching overtempering zones in the 2% nital-etched section where martensite has decomposed to softer tempered martensite — appearing as dark patches or bands 0.05–0.5 mm below the surface with hardness drops of 100–250 HV below specified minimum. Re-hardening burn: if surface temperature exceeds Ac1 during grinding, fresh untempered martensite forms a white-etching layer (WEL) 0.01–0.1 mm thick at the surface (very hard >800 HV but extremely brittle, cracking readily). Both types produce tensile residual stresses at the surface, reversing the normally compressive residual stress from carburising+quenching, reducing the bending fatigue limit by 30–50%.
What is the difference between initial pitting and progressive/destructive pitting?
Initial (corrective) pitting occurs early in gear service as contact redistributes due to surface finish improvement and small spalls at stress concentrations. It is self-arresting: once contact stress redistributes, pitting ceases. Pit sizes are typically less than 0.5 mm diameter. Progressive pitting continues because the Hertz contact stress exceeds the material’s contact fatigue limit throughout the tooth flank — pits coalesce and enlarge. Destructive pitting represents severe progressive pitting removing significant surface material, causing vibration, noise, and eventual tooth fracture. Destructive pitting initiates near the pitch line where sliding velocity is zero (maximum stress cycle severity) and propagates above and below. All three follow the AGMA 1010-F14 classification scheme.
What is scuffing and how is it distinguished from abrasive wear in a failed gear?
Scuffing results from EHD lubricant film breakdown allowing direct metal-to-metal contact: asperity micro-welding followed by tearing as surfaces separate. It is characterised by rough, torn surface texture in the sliding direction, shallow grooves with plastically deformed ridges, and material transfer between surfaces. It occurs first near the tooth tip and root (highest sliding velocity, thinnest EHD film). Abrasive wear is caused by hard particles in the lubricant and produces fine parallel scratches in the sliding direction, no metal transfer, and gradual uniform material removal. Lubricant analysis — particle count (ISO 4406), particle morphology by ferrography, and spectrometric analysis for wear metals — distinguishes the two: scuffing produces large, irregular metallic particles; abrasive wear produces fine spherical particles and cutting chips.
How does retained austenite affect gear tooth performance?
Retained austenite (RA) has dual effects. Excessive RA (>30% by XRD, ASTM E975) reduces surface hardness (austenite ~200–350 HV vs. martensite 700–800 HV at high carbon), reduces bending fatigue strength, and causes dimensional instability as RA transforms to martensite under contact stress (TRIP effect), causing volume change and potential microcracking. However, moderate RA (15–25%) can improve contact fatigue resistance by crack-tip transformation toughening — RA transforms at crack tips, increasing local toughness and arresting crack growth. Most high-performance gear specifications limit RA to 20–25% maximum at the case surface. Sub-zero treatment at −80°C after quenching reduces RA by driving the martensite finish temperature (Mf) below ambient.
What is the AGMA failure mode classification system for gears?
AGMA 1010-F14 (Appearance of Gear Teeth — Terminology of Wear and Failure) classifies gear tooth surface damage into six primary categories: (1) Wear — abrasion, adhesion (scuffing), polishing, erosion; (2) Surface fatigue — initial pitting, progressive pitting, spalling, micropitting (grey staining), case crushing; (3) Plastic flow — rolling, peening, cold flow, indentation; (4) Fracture — bending fatigue, overload fracture, case-core separation; (5) Cracking — grinding cracks, case cracks, stress corrosion cracking; (6) Corrosion — uniform corrosion, pitting corrosion, hydrogen embrittlement, fretting. AGMA 1010-F14 should be the primary classification reference in every gear failure investigation, consulted alongside the physical evidence to ensure unambiguous failure mode identification.
What metallographic section orientation is used for gear failure investigation?
Two primary sections are required. (1) Longitudinal tooth cross-section: cut perpendicular to the tooth flank surface through the tooth centreline and root fillet. Reveals: case depth profile from flank to root; case-core hardness transition; retained austenite; carbide network; prior austenite grain size; tempered martensite morphology; and any grinding burn or decarburisation. (2) Transverse section: cut parallel to the tooth axis at mid-face width. Reveals: case depth uniformity across face width; intergranular oxidation (IGO) depth; and carbide films at grain boundaries. For fatigue failures, a third section through the fracture plane from the origin toward the termination reveals beach marks, ratchet marks, and origin microstructure without disturbing the fracture surface for SEM examination.

Recommended References

ASM Handbook Vol. 11: Failure Analysis and Prevention (2021 Ed.)
The definitive reference for metallurgical failure analysis methodology, fracture surface interpretation, fatigue analysis, and root cause investigation procedures.
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ASM Handbook Vol. 11B: Failure Analysis of Mechanical Components
Comprehensive case studies of gear failures, bearing failures, and rotating machinery failures with full metallographic investigation protocols and failure mode examples.
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Gear Failure Analysis — Dudley (ASM International)
The classic dedicated gear failure reference: photographic atlas of all failure modes, AGMA classification, case studies, and corrective action guidance for gear design and manufacture.
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Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance — Krauss (2nd Ed.)
Graduate-level treatment of carburising metallurgy, case depth development, retained austenite, and the microstructure-fatigue property relationships underpinning gear steel performance.
View on Amazon

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