Influence of residual stress due to the equatorial weld on the ultimate strength of a Ti80 spherical pressure shell

Author(s):  
Liangbi Li ◽  
Huaning Bao ◽  
Zhengquan Wan ◽  
Yanqing Li ◽  
Kaixiang Sun ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Wei Xu ◽  
C. Guedes Soares

AbstractThe objective of this paper is to study the residual ultimate strength of box beams with impact-induced damage, as a model of what may occur in ship hulls. The bottom and side plates of ship hulls can suffer denting or fracture damage due to grounding, collision and other contacts during the ship’s service life and these impact-induced damages could result in considerable strength degradation. Box beams are firstly subjected to impact loading and then four-point bending loading is imposed on the damaged structures to assess the residual strength using ANSYS/LS_DYNA. The ultimate moment and collapse modes are discussed considering the effect of impact location. The impact-induced deformation is introduced in the four-point bending simulation, and the impact-induced stress is included or not to determine the effect of residual stress and distortion after impact. It is shown that impact location has significant influence on the residual ultimate bending moment of the damaged box beam providing that the impact energy is kept constant. The collapse modes also change when the impactor strikes on different locations. Damaged hard corner and inclined neutral axes might explain the reduction of ultimate strength and diverse collapse modes. The residual stress in the box beam after impact may increase or decrease the ultimate strength depending on impact location.


Author(s):  
M. Perl

The equivalent thermal load was previously shown to be the only feasible method by which the residual stresses due to autofrettage and its redistribution, as a result of cracking, can be implemented in a finite element analysis, of a fully or partially autofrettaged thick-walled cylindrical pressure vessel. The present analysis involves developing a similar methodology for treating an autofrettaged thick-walled spherical pressure vessel. A general procedure for evaluating the equivalent temperature loading for simulating an arbitrary, analytical or numerical, spherosymmetric autofrettage residual stress field in a spherical pressure vessel is developed. Once presented, the algorithm is applied to two distinct cases. In the first case, an analytical expression for the equivalent thermal loading is obtained for the ideal autofrettage stress field in a spherical shell. In the second case, the algorithm is applied to the discrete numerical values of a realistic autofrettage residual stress field incorporating the Bauschinger effect. As a result, a discrete equivalent temperature field is obtained. Furthermore, a finite element analysis is performed for each of the above cases, applying the respective temperature field to the spherical vessel. The induced stress fields are evaluated for each case and then compared to the original stress. The finite element results prove that the proposed procedure yields equivalent temperature fields that in turn simulate very accurately the residual stress fields for both the ideal and the realistic autofrettage cases.


2010 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 444-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.B. Pan ◽  
W.C. Cui ◽  
Y.S. Shen ◽  
T. Liu

2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Perl

The equivalent thermal load was previously shown to be the only feasible method by which the residual stresses due to autofrettage and its redistribution, as a result of cracking, can be implemented in a finite element (FE) analysis of a fully or partially autofrettaged thick-walled cylindrical pressure vessel. The present analysis involves developing a similar methodology for treating an autofrettaged thick-walled spherical pressure vessel. A general procedure for evaluating the equivalent temperature loading for simulating an arbitrary, analytical or numerical spherosymmetric autofrettage residual stress field in a spherical pressure vessel is developed. Once presented, the algorithm is applied to two distinct cases. In the first case, an analytical expression for the equivalent thermal loading is obtained for the ideal autofrettage stress field in a spherical shell. In the second case, the algorithm is applied to the discrete numerical values of a realistic autofrettage residual stress field incorporating the Bauschinger effect. As a result, a discrete equivalent temperature field is obtained. Furthermore, a FE analysis is performed for each of the above cases, applying the respective temperature field to the spherical vessel. The induced stress fields are evaluated for each case and then compared to the original stress. The FE results prove that the proposed procedure yields equivalent temperature fields that in turn simulate very accurately the residual stress fields for both the ideal and the realistic autofrettage cases.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 2088 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenfeng Li ◽  
Sen Dong ◽  
Tingce Wang ◽  
Weijun Xu ◽  
Xueqian Zhou

The welded stiffened plate is widely used in naval architecture and offshore engineering as a basic structural member. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of welding residual stress and steel grade on the ultimate strength of stiffened plates under uniaxial compressive load by non-linear finite element analysis. Nineteen stiffened plates built with three types of stiffeners with various column slenderness ratios provided in the ISSC’2000 VI.2 benchmark calculations are employed in the present study. The commercial finite element code ABAQUS is applied to simulate the collapse behavior of the stiffened plates and verified against the benchmark calculations. Fabrication-related imperfections, such as initial deflections and residual stresses, are accounted for in the simulations. The ultimate strength of stiffened plates built in common shipbuilding steels, namely S235, S315, S355 and S390, are investigated by varying the yield strength of materials in the simulation. Analysis of the numerical results shows that the welding residual stress reduces the ultimate strength of stiffened plates, and increase in yield strength of the material can effectively improve the ultimate strength of common ship stiffened plates; and quantitative analyses of their influences have also been performed.


Author(s):  
M. Perl ◽  
J. Perry

Increased strength-to-weight ratio and extended fatigue life are the main objectives in the optimal design of modern pressure vessels. These two goals can mutually be achieved by creating a proper residual stress field in the vessel’s wall, by a process known as autofrettage. Although there are many studies that have investigated the autofrettage problem for cylindrical vessels, only few such studies exist for spherical ones. There are two principal autofrettage processes for pressure vessels: hydrostatic and swage autofrettage, but spherical vessels can only undergo the hydrostatic one. Because of the spherosymmetry of the problem, autofrettage in a spherical pressure vessel is treated as a two-dimensional problem and solved solely in terms of the radial displacement. The mathematical model is based on the idea of solving the elasto-plastic autofrettage problem using the form of the elastic solution. Substituting Hooke’s equations into the equilibrium equation and using the strain-displacement relations, yields a differential equation, which is a function of the plastic strains. The plastic strains are determined using the Prandtl-Reuss flow rule and the differential equation is solved by the explicit finite difference method. The previously developed 2-D computer program, for the evaluation of hydrostatic autofrettage in a thick-walled cylinder, is adapted to handle the problem of spherical autofrettage. The appropriate residual stresses are then evaluated using the new code. The presently obtained residual stress field is then compared to three existing solutions emphasizing the major role the material law plays in determining the autofrettage residual stress field.


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