Prediction of actual fatigue test temperature and isothermal fatigue life curves for non-crystallising rubber under fully relaxing uni-axial loading conditions

Author(s):  
Tadej Kocjan ◽  
Marko Nagode ◽  
Jernej Klemenc ◽  
Simon Oman
Author(s):  
Julien Fontanabona ◽  
Ky Dang Van ◽  
Vincent Gaffard ◽  
Zied Moumni ◽  
Paul Wiet

Pipeline dents fatigue life prediction is a subject of high interest for pipelines operating companies. Empreinte is an in-house developed pre and post processor to ABAQUS Finite Element Calculations dedicated to pipeline integrity assessment. Empreinte was first developed and experimentally validated for dents assessments under static loading conditions. As oil but also gas transmission pipelines are submitted to cyclic loading conditions (internal pressure variations, shutdowns, temperature variations …), it was decided to introduce a fatigue life criterion in Empreinte based on the Dang Van theory assuming that local mesoscopic stresses drive fatigue crack initiation. Full scale tests performed for PRCI projects PR-201-927, PR-201-9324 and MD-4-2 were used to validate the proposed fatigue assessment methodology: - the first full scale fatigue test was performed in 1994 on an X52 pipe. For this test, limited material and test data were available. - the second full scale fatigue test was performed in 2007 on an X52 pipe. For this test, material characterization (in particular tensile tests with full stress strain curves) and test data (strain gages measurements, indenter geometry …) were available. Fatigue life assessments were performed following three main steps: 1. using available data: non linear kinematic hardening constitutive laws were identified for the two pipes materials; 2. finite elements elastic-plastic modeling of the denting processes were carried out; 3. fatigue calculations were performed following a new approach using Dang Van criterion for which the parameters were determined from literature data. The elastic shakedown assumption allowed the determination of the local stress cycle from the macroscopic stress cycle. The fatigue criterion integrating the combined influences of shear and hydrostatic stresses was checked on all points of the pipe. Good agreement between experimental and calculated fatigue lives and fatigue crack initiation points was reached. This opens a promising way to assess pipeline defects fatigue life. Efforts are now focused on the standardization of a testing method to identify the Dang Van criterion of a pipeline material at least in air environment.


Author(s):  
Jeong K. Hong ◽  
Thomas P. Forte

Risers, pipelines and flowlines for deep water applications are subject to corrosive environments. Especially, in the presence of hydrogen sulfide which makes the field sour, their fatigue performance becomes significantly degraded. In order to quantify the sour degradation effect, a knock-down factor has been introduced. This factor is defined as the fatigue life reduction relative to the in-air fatigue life. Several sets of fatigue test results in sour service environments have been published. These include strip specimens of different sizes, e.g., diameters, wall thicknesses, and arc lengths. Naturally, the knock-down factor must be based upon a statistically valid number of fatigue test results obtained from the same specimen geometry and the same loading conditions tested in air and in sour conditions. Currently, the database available in the open literature is too limited to properly define a knock-down factor. Moreover, there is a great deal of scatter within the database and each test in a sour environment is costly and time consuming. Thus, it is difficult to establish a statistically valid database upon which to base the knock-down factor. A mesh-insensitive structural stress method has been developed by Battelle researchers and has been proven to be highly effective in correlating the fatigue behavior of welded joints. In 2007, the Battelle structural stress based weld fatigue master S-N curve was included in ASME Section VIII Div. 2 because it successfully consolidated more than 800 fatigue test results for weld toe failures onto a single master S-N curve with very little scatter, regardless of specimen shape, size, loading type, and steel alloy [1–2]. A knock-down factor is derived by applying the Battelle structural stress method to the existing database for sour environment tests and by using the current in-air database as the reference condition. This approach will reduce the uncertainty in the knock-down factor because it allows a wider range of sour environment data from specimens of different sizes, types, and loading conditions to be combined, while simultaneously reducing scatter. As such, a unified knock-down factor can be determined with greater statistical validity and wider applicability for design recommendations in sour conditions.


Author(s):  
Seiji Asada ◽  
Daiki Takagoshi ◽  
Yuichi Fukuta ◽  
Kazuya Tsutsumi ◽  
Kawaljit Ahluwalia ◽  
...  

In order to understand the fatigue behavior in PWR primary water environment, the influence of non-isothermal transient condition was investigated for austenitic stainless steel 316SS. In our previous study (PVP2016-63798), isothermal and non-isothermal environmentally assisted fatigue tests were performed. The fatigue life of the non-isothermal fatigue test consisted of a high temperature and tensile strain rate transient, a portion of which occurred in the compressive strain region of the strain cycle. The result of this test showed longer life than the predicted fatigue life estimated by the modified rate approach and Fen factor as presented in NUREG/CR-6909 Rev.1. In this paper, the reason why the fatigue test showed longer fatigue life is studied. Crack growth analysis was performed to understand the effect of the environment on fatigue life. Additionally, application of the Weighted K Rate (WKR) method described in reference (PVP2016-63497) was applied to a series of tests. This approach showed good agreement on fatigue life for a number of different waveforms for isothermal tests. The methodology was applied to some of this investigation’s non-isothermal fatigue tests and shown to be an improvement that justifies further investigation.


Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 397
Author(s):  
Yahya Ali Fageehi

This paper presents computational modeling of a crack growth path under mixed-mode loadings in linear elastic materials and investigates the influence of a hole on both fatigue crack propagation and fatigue life when subjected to constant amplitude loading conditions. Though the crack propagation is inevitable, the simulation specified the crack propagation path such that the critical structure domain was not exceeded. ANSYS Mechanical APDL 19.2 was introduced with the aid of a new feature in ANSYS: Smart Crack growth technology. It predicts the propagation direction and subsequent fatigue life for structural components using the extended finite element method (XFEM). The Paris law model was used to evaluate the mixed-mode fatigue life for both a modified four-point bending beam and a cracked plate with three holes under the linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) assumption. Precise estimates of the stress intensity factors (SIFs), the trajectory of crack growth, and the fatigue life by an incremental crack propagation analysis were recorded. The findings of this analysis are confirmed in published works in terms of crack propagation trajectories under mixed-mode loading conditions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Szydło ◽  
K. Malicki

Abstract The bonding state of the asphalt layers in a road pavement structure significantly affects its fatigue life. These bondings, therefore, require detailed tests and optimization. In this paper, the analyses of the correlation between the results of laboratory static tests and the results of fatigue tests of asphalt mixture interlayer bondings were performed. The existence of the relationships between selected parameters was confirmed. In the future, the results of these analyses may allow for assessment of interlayer bondings’ fatigue life based on the results of quick and relatively easy static tests.


2011 ◽  
Vol 311-313 ◽  
pp. 301-308
Author(s):  
Shou Hong Han ◽  
Zhen Hua Lu ◽  
Yong Jin Liu

In order to investigate the multi-axial mechanical properties of a kind of PU (polyurethane) foam, some experiments in different loading conditions including uni-axial tension, uni-axial compression, hydrostatic compression and three-point bending were conducted. It is shown that the hydrostatic component influences yield behavior of PU foam, the yield strength and degree of strain hardening in hydrostatic compression exceed those for uni-axial compression. In terms of the differential hardening constitutive model, the evolution of PU foam yield surface and plastic hardening laws were fitted from experimental data. A finite element method was applied to analyze the quasi-static responses of the PU foam sandwich beam subjected to three-point bending, and good agreement was observed between experimental load-displacement responses and computational predictions, which validated the multi-axial loading methods and stress-strain constitutive model parameters. Moreover, effects of two foam models applied to uni-axial loading and multi-axial loading conditions were analyzed and compared with three-point bending tests and simulations. It is found that the multi-axial constitutive model can bring more accurate prediction whose parameters are obtained from the tests above mentioned.


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