Residual stresses in a stress lattice—Experiments and finite element simulations

2009 ◽  
Vol 209 (9) ◽  
pp. 4320-4328 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Gustafsson ◽  
M. Hofwing ◽  
N. Strömberg
Author(s):  
Karim Serasli ◽  
Harry Coules ◽  
David Smith

Most residual stress measurement methods are limited in terms of their stress and spatial resolution, number of stress tensor components measured and measurement uncertainty. In contrast, finite element simulations of welding processes provide full field distributions of residual stresses, with results dependent on the quality of the input conditions. Measurements and predictions are often not the same, and the true residual stress state is difficult to determine. In this paper both measurements and predictions of residual stresses, created in clad nuclear reactor pressure vessel steels, are made. The measurements are then used as input to a residual stress mapping technique provided within a finite element analysis. The technique is applied iteratively to converge to a balanced solution which is not necessarily unique. However, the technique aids the identification of locations for additional measurements. This is illustrated in the paper. The outcomes from the additional measurements permit more realistic and reliable estimates of the true residual state to be made. The outcomes are compared with the finite element simulations of the welding process and used to determine whether there is a need for additional input to the simulations.


2005 ◽  
Vol 88 (9) ◽  
pp. 2515-2520 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Vila ◽  
C. Prieto ◽  
P. Miranzo ◽  
M. I. Osendi ◽  
J. M. del Rio ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ted L. Anderson ◽  
Gregory W. Brown

Many older pipelines contain significant residual stress due to the forming process. Cold expansion or a normalizing heat treatment can virtually eliminate residual forming stresses, but these practices were less common in the past. In the absence of cold expansion or normalization, residual forming stresses can be reduced by hydrostatic testing or operating pressures, but not eliminated entirely. Residual stresses can contribute to fracture in pipelines, particularly when the material toughness is low. This article presents a series of analyses that seek to quantify the magnitude of residual forming stresses as well as their impact on pipeline integrity. The pipe forming process was simulated with elastic-plastic finite element analyses, which considered the effect of subsequent loading on relaxation of residual stresses. A second set of finite element simulations were used to quantify the effect of residual stresses on fracture behavior.


Author(s):  
Michael C. Smith ◽  
Ann C. Smith ◽  
Robert C. Wimpory ◽  
Carsten Ohms ◽  
Brahim Nadri ◽  
...  

A single weld bead deposited on a flat plate is a deceptively simple problem that is in practice a challenge for both measurement and prediction of weld residual stresses. Task Group 1 of the NeT collaborative network has examined this problem in a two-phase programme extending from 2002 to 2008. Ten independent sets of residual stress measurements have been reported using diverse techniques, and over forty finite element simulations have been performed. This paper reviews Phase 2 of the Task Group 1 round robin. Here, the finite element simulations all made use of optimised thermal solutions, in which the global welding parameters, including efficiency, were fixed, and only the detailed heat source geometry was varied. These resulted in accurate far field welding temperature distributions, with significant variability only close to the weld bead itself. The subsequent mechanical analyses made use of kinematic, isotropic, and mixed isotropic-kinematic material constitutive models, and made a variety of assumptions about the introduction of weld filler material to the structure and the handling of high temperature inelastic strains. The large database of measurements allowed the derivation of statistical best estimates using a Bayesian “duff data” approach, and these best estimates were compared with the predictions to establish the most accurate material constitutive models. The most accurate predictions of residual stress were made using non-linear kinematic or mixed isotropic-kinematic constitutive models. The methods used to handle high-temperature inelastic strains influenced the predicted stresses only in regions where very high temperatures were predicted during welding. The results emphasise the importance and value of both well-characterised benchmark problems and international collaboration in the development of technologies to both measure and predict weld residual stresses.


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