Analysis of Plastic Deformation in a Steel Cylinder Striking a Rigid Target

1954 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-70
Author(s):  
E. H. Lee ◽  
S. J. Tupper

Abstract The G. I. Taylor dynamic compression test consists of firing a cylinder of the material to be tested at a target of hardened armor plate, and deducing the dynamic yield stress from the resulting deformation. In the interpretation of the results, interest is concentrated on the wave front of initial plastic straining. The present paper attempts the theoretical determination of the entire strain distribution in such a test cylinder of nickel-chrome steel, this material being chosen since the dynamic influence on the stress-strain relation is likely to be small, thus permitting the static relation to be used in the theory. Strain distributions deduced by two theoretical approaches compare satisfactorily with the distribution of strain obtained in such a dynamic compression test, thus justifying the assumption for this material at the speed considered. The treatment of this problem requires a theory of the propagation of plastic waves, which is developed in this paper, for the particular type of stress-strain curve pertaining to the high-strength alloy steel tested.

2010 ◽  
Vol 150-151 ◽  
pp. 354-357
Author(s):  
Heng Yan Xie ◽  
Xin Zheng

Self- compacting concrete (SCC) has characteristics of good flow-ability, non-vibrating and self-compacting. It is the optimum to be used in concrete members with densely distributed steel bar and concrete is inconvenient to be vibrated. The mixture ratio of design grade of C20 and C40 SCC commonly used in project is given after trial mix. The compression stress-strain relation of SCC prism is obtained by MTS. The Mechanical property indexes of SCC are got. The ultimate compression strain of the extreme fiber is acquired by testing beam made of SCC, and the relation between the ultimate compression strain of the extreme fiber in flexural member and the strain at the peak of the stress-strain curve subjected to uniaxial compression is given.


1953 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 523-529
Author(s):  
J. E. Johnson ◽  
D. S. Wood ◽  
D. S. Clark

Abstract This paper presents the results of an experimental study of the stress-strain relation of annealed 2S aluminum when subjected to compression impact. Two methods of securing a dynamic stress-strain curve are considered, namely, from the measurement of impact stress as a function of maximum plastic strain, and impact stress as a function of the impact velocity. The dynamic stress-strain curves obtained by these methods lie considerably above the static curve. The elevation in stress of the dynamic relations above the static relation increases progressively from zero at the elastic limit to about 20 per cent at a strain of 4.5 per cent. However, the two dynamic relations are not coincident which indicates that the behavior of the material cannot be described by a single stress-strain curve for all impact velocities. A family of stress-strain curves which differ slightly from each other and which depend upon the final strain is postulated in order to correlate both sets of data adequately.


Author(s):  
J. A. Gianetto ◽  
J. T. Bowker ◽  
R. Bouchard ◽  
D. V. Dorling ◽  
D. Horsley

The primary objective of this study was to develop a better understanding of all-weld-metal tensile testing using both round and strip tensile specimens in order to establish the variation of weld metal strength with respect to test specimen through-thickness position as well as the location around the circumference of a given girth weld. Results from a series of high strength pipeline girth welds have shown that there can be considerable differences in measured engineering 0.2% offset and 0.5% extension yield strengths using round and strip tensile specimens. To determine whether or not the specimen type influenced the observed stress-strain behaviour a series of tests were conducted on high strength X70, X80 and X100 line pipe steels and two double joint welds produced in X70 linepipe using a double-submerged-arc welding process. These results confirmed that the same form of stress-strain curve is obtained with both round and strip tensile specimens, although with the narrowest strip specimen slightly higher strengths were observed for the X70 and X100 linepipe steels. For the double joint welds the discontinuous stress-strain curves were observed for both the round and modified strip specimens. Tests conducted on the rolled X100 mechanized girth welds established that the round bar tensile specimens exhibited higher strength than the strip specimens. In addition, the trends for the split-strip specimens, which consistently exhibit lower strength for the specimen towards the OD and higher for the mid-thickness positioned specimen has also been confirmed. This further substantiates the through-thickness strength variation that has been observed in other X100 narrow gap welds. A second objective of this study was to provide an evaluation of the weld metal toughness and to characterize the weld metal microstructure for the series of mechanized girth welds examined.


2019 ◽  
Vol 795 ◽  
pp. 22-28
Author(s):  
Yun Qiang Peng ◽  
Li Xun Cai ◽  
Di Yao ◽  
Hui Chen ◽  
Guang Zhao Han

A small punch testing (SPT)-related stress-strain relation (SPT-SR) model is used to obtain the stress-strain curve of DP600 according to Chen-Cai equivalent energy method. And then the SPT and notched small punch testing (NSPT) specimens were simulated in order to determine the critical fracture criterion of DP600 on the basis of the stress-strain curve obtained by SPT-SR model. Lastly, the J resistance curve of small C-shaped inside edge-notched tension (CIET) specimen for DP600 dual-phase steel was successfully predicted based on the aforementioned fracture criterion.


2014 ◽  
Vol 567 ◽  
pp. 476-481
Author(s):  
Nasir Shafiq ◽  
Tehmina Ayub ◽  
Muhd Fadhil Nuruddin

To date, various predictive models for high strength concrete (HSC) have been proposed that are capable of generating complete stress-strain curves. These models were validated for HSC prepared with and without silica fume. In this paper, an investigation on these predictive models has been presented by applying them on two different series of HSC. The first series of HSC was prepared by utilizing 100% cement content, while second series was prepared by utilizing 90% cement and 10% Metakaolin. The compressive strength of the concrete was ranged from 71-87 MPa. For each series of HSC, total four cylinders of the size 100×200mm were cast to obtain the stress-strain curves at 28 days.It has been found that the pattern of the stress-strain curve of each cylinder among four cylinders of each series was different from other, in spite of preparing from the similar batch. When predictive models were applied to these cylinders using their test data then it was found that all models more or less deficient to accurately predict the stress-strain behavior.


Author(s):  
James D. Hart ◽  
Nasir Zulfiqar ◽  
Joe Zhou

Buried pipelines can be exposed to displacement-controlled environmental loadings (such as landslides, earthquake fault movements, etc.) which impose deformation demands on the pipeline. When analyzing pipelines for these load scenarios, the deformation demands are typically characterized based on the curvature and/or the longitudinal tension and compression strain response of the pipe. The term “strain demand” is used herein to characterize the calculated longitudinal strain response of a pipeline subject to environmentally-induced deformation demands. The shape of the pipe steel stress-strain relationship can have a significant effect on the pipe strain demands computed using pipeline deformation analyses for displacement-controlled loading conditions. In general, with sufficient levels of imposed deformation demand, a pipe steel stress-strain curve with a relatively abrupt or “sharp” elastic-to-plastic transition will tend to lead to larger strain demands than a stress-strain curve with a relatively rounded elastic-to-plastic transition. Similarly, a stress-strain curve with relatively low strain hardening modulus characteristics will tend to lead to larger strain demands than a stress-strain curve with relatively high strain hardening modulus characteristics. High strength UOE pipe can exhibit significant levels of anisotropy (i.e., the shapes of the stress-strain relationships in the longitudinal tension/compression and hoop tension/compression directions can be significantly different). To the extent that the stress-strain curves in the different directions can have unfavorable shape characteristics, it follows that anisotropy can also play an important role in pipeline strain demand evaluations. This paper summarizes a pipeline industry research project aimed at evaluation of the effects of anisotropy and the shape of pipe steel stress-strain relationships on pipeline strain demand for X80 and X100 UOE pipe. The research included: a review of pipeline industry literature on the subject matter; a discussion of pipe steel plasticity concepts for UOE pipe; characterization of the anisotropy and stress-strain curve shapes for both conventional and high strain pipe steels; development of representative analytical X80 and X100 stress-strain relationships; and evaluation of a large matrix of ground-movement induced pipeline deformation scenarios to evaluate key pipe stress-strain relationship shape and anisotropy parameters. The main conclusion from this work is that pipe steel specifications for high strength UOE pipe for strain-based design applications should be supplemented to consider shape-characterizing parameters such as the plastic complementary energy.


Author(s):  
Hongyuan Mei ◽  
Deyu Wang ◽  
Qi Wan

Abstract Six specimens with one Tee-bar stiffener and its attached plating were tested under axial compression to investigate the ultimate strength. The specimens have one longitudinal span and the simply supported boundary conditions at the end edge of loading were produced based on a horizontal test fixture. The initial geometrical imperfections were measured and tensile tests of high tensile steel used in the specimens with different thickness were conducted. The results calculated by FE analysis with true stress-strain curves, average measured thickness and measured initial geometrical deformation could reach a good agreement with experimental results. The ultimate strength calculated with elastic/perfectly plastic curve is approximately 10% larger than that with true stress-strain curve. The reason is that the proportional limit stress of material is significantly lower than 0.2% proof stress for the high strength steel used in specimens. And the occurrence of buckling is earlier than the time that the material enters into plastic stage. As a result, the ultimate strength assessed with elastic/perfectly plastic curve doesn’t always the lowest result and it should be adopted carefully.


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