Cory --
I would tend to think, as you indicated, that a compressive mean stress should give either a longer lifetime or higher allowable alternating stress. This makes sense, since the compressive mean stress would reduce the maximum stress that the part would experience. This is the reasoning that is usually cited for fatigue improvements due to nitriding or shot peening.
However, Juvinall, "Engineering Considerations of Stress, Strain, and Strength", p. 271, fig. 14.5 shows fatigue data points for steel and aluminum where a compressive mean stress has been applied. A number of these points fall at or just slightly above the fatigue strength Sn of the material (i.e., the fatigue strength where there is neither tensile or compressive static load). This occurs even where the compressive stress is considerable (in one case very near the yield strength). (Shigley, "Mechanical Engineering Design", p. 178, fig. 5-35 shows similar data.)
My question is why these data do not show improvement with a mean compressive stress, similar to the improvement when a part is nitrided or shot peened.
Note: the figures do show a number of data points where the alternating failure stress > Sn when a compressive mean stress has been applied. However, I would have expected that ALL of the data points would have shown such improvement. I don't have any additional information on how these tests were performed. Is it possible that the apparent inconsistency could be due to low-cycle versus high-cycle testing or the type of test (rotating, bending, or push-pull)?
By the way, the above Goodman diagrams show the mean stress (either tensile or compressive) on the horizontal axis and only the alternating stress amplitude (peak value) on the vertical axis.
Thanks,
Don Culp