Accuracy of the Modified Wöhler Curve Method applied along with the rref=1mm concept in estimating lifetime of welded joints subjected to multiaxial fatigue loading

2011 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 1075-1091 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Susmel ◽  
C.M. Sonsino ◽  
R. Tovo
2013 ◽  
Vol 577-578 ◽  
pp. 125-128
Author(s):  
W. Brevis ◽  
Luca Susmel ◽  
J.B. Boxall

The present paper summarises an attempt of using the so-called Modified Wöhler Curve Method (MWCM) to estimate fatigue damage in pitted cast iron water pipes subjected to in-service variable amplitude multiaxial fatigue loading. In this setting, pits are treated as hemispherical/hyperbolic notches whose depth increases over time due to conventional corrosion processes taking places in buried cast-iron pipes. The validity of such an approach is proven by showing, through a case study, that, under particular circumstances, the combined effect of corrosion and fatigue can remarkably shorten the in-service lifetime of cast-iron pipes as observed in the case study.


Author(s):  
Luca Susmel ◽  
Giovanni Meneghetti ◽  
Bruno Atzori

The present study is concerned with the use of the modified Manson–Coffin curve method to estimate the lifetime of notched components subjected to multiaxial cyclic loading. The above criterion postulates that fatigue strength under complex loading paths can efficiently be evaluated in terms of maximum shear strain amplitude, provided that the reference Manson–Coffin curve used to predict the number of cycles to failure is defined by taking into account the actual degree of multiaxiality/nonproportionality of the stress/strain state damaging the assumed crack initiation site. The accuracy and reliability of the above fatigue life estimation technique was checked by considering about 300 experimental results taken from the literature. Such data were generated by testing notched cylindrical samples made of four different metallic materials and subjected to in-phase and out-of-phase biaxial nominal loading. The accuracy of our criterion in taking into account the presence of nonzero mean stresses was also investigated in depth. To calculate the stress/strain quantities needed for the in-field use of the modified Manson–Coffin curve method, notch root stresses and strains were estimated by using not only the well-known analytical tool due to Köttgen et al. (1995, “Pseudo Stress and Pseudo Strain Based Approaches to Multiaxial Notch Analysis,” Fatigue Fract. Eng. Mater. Struct., 18(9), pp. 981–1006) (applied along with the ratchetting plasticity model devised by Jiang and Sehitoglu (1996, “Modelling of Cyclic Ratchetting Plasticity, Part I: Development and Constitutive Relations. Transactions of the ASME,” ASME J. Appl. Mech., 63, pp. 720–725; 1996, “Modelling of Cyclic Ratchetting Plasticity, Part I: Development and Constitutive Relations,” Trans. ASME J. Appl. Mech., 63, pp. 720–725)) but also by taking full advantage of the finite element method to perform some calibration analyses. The systematic use of our approach was seen to result in estimates falling within an error factor of about 3.


2011 ◽  
Vol 488-489 ◽  
pp. 747-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Susmel ◽  
David Taylor

The present paper is concerned with the use of the Modified Wöhler Curve Method (MWCM), applied in terms of nominal stresses, to estimate lifetime of notched components subjected to variable amplitude multiaxial fatigue loading. The MWCM is applied by defining the critical plane through that direction experiencing the maximum variance of the resolved shear stress: since the shear stress resolved along the above direction is a monodimensional quantity, fatigue cycles are directly counted by the classical Rain-Flow method. The performed validation exercise, based on an extensive experimental investigation, seems to strongly support the idea that the MWCM applied along with the classical nominal stress based approach is capable of accurately estimating fatigue damage also in notched components subjected to variable amplitude multiaxial load histories.


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