Buckling Analysis in Creep Conditions: Review and Comparison

Author(s):  
Andre´ Turbat ◽  
Bernard Drubay

In the case of structures operating at high temperature in normal or accidental conditions, the influence of creep has to be considered at the design stage because this phenomenon may reduce the lifetime significantly. This is true in particular for buckling analysis : in creep conditions, the buckling sometimes occurs after a long period under a compressive load which is lower than the critical load assessed when considering an instantaneous buckling. The main reason is that creep deformations induce an amplification of the initial geometrical imperfections and consequently a reduction of the buckling load. Some Design Codes incorporate special rules and/or methods to take creep buckling into account. Creep buckling analysis methods aim at evaluating critical loading for a given hold period with creep or alternatively critical creep time for a given loading. The Codes where creep buckling is considered also define margins with respect to critical loading : it shall be demonstrated that creep instability will not occur during the whole lifetime when multiplying the specified loading by a coefficient (design factor) depending on the situation level. For the design of NPP, specific creep buckling rules exist in the US, France and Russia. In the US, ASME, Section III, Subsection NH, which is dedicated to high temperature components design, provides limits which are applicable to general geometrical configurations and loading conditions that may cause buckling due to creep behaviour of the material. For load-controlled time-dependent creep buckling, the design factors to apply to the specified loadings are 1.5 for levels A, B or C service loadings and 1.25 for level D service loadings. A design factor is not required in the case of purely strain-controlled buckling. No specific method is provided to obtain critical loading or critical time for creep instability. In France, creep buckling rules included in RCC-MR, Chapter RB or RC 3200 are similar to those of ASME, Subsection NH. In addition, a new simplified method has been developed recently to assess critical creep loading/time for a shell under mechanical loading. Diagrams, presently valid for 316 austenitic steel, have been established from a ring model with perfect plasticity. Creep buckling load is determined applying a reduction factor to Euler instantaneous buckling load, depending on temperature, hold time, thinness of the structure and geometrical imperfection amplitude. This method has been validated by experimental tests and finite element results. It will be included in Appendix A7 of RCC-MR, Edition 2000. In Russia, the document PNAE G-7-002-86 applicable to NPP equipment and pipeline strength analysis, presents stability check analytical calculations to be performed to determine the allowable loading or allowable operation lifetime for typical geometries (cylindrical shells, dished ends) and loadings (external pressure, axial force). In the case of stability analysis under creep, creep deformation is assessed using a Norton law. In Germany, a KTA project including an analytical method for creep buckling analysis had also been proposed at the beginning of 90th to be used in HTR development. Finally, in India, a creep buckling analysis method has been proposed in the framework of PFBR project. As per this approach, elastic-plastic analysis should be performed replacing the instantaneous stress-strain curve at the design temperature by the isochronous curve for the time corresponding to the lifetime of the component and the same temperature. These methods are applied in the case of cylindrical shells under external pressure and comparative results are provided. The RCC-MR method appears to be reasonably conservative and applicable with several creep law types.

2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (02) ◽  
pp. 215-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
MATTEO BROGGI ◽  
ADRIANO CALVI ◽  
GERHART I. SCHUËLLER

Cylindrical shells under axial compression are susceptible to buckling and hence require the development of enhanced underlying mathematical models in order to accurately predict the buckling load. Imperfections of the geometry of the cylinders may cause a drastic decrease of the buckling load and give rise to the need of advanced techniques in order to consider these imperfections in a buckling analysis. A deterministic buckling analysis is based on the use of the so-called knockdown factors, which specifies the reduction of the buckling load of the perfect shell in order to account for the inherent uncertainties in the geometry. In this paper, it is shown that these knockdown factors are overly conservative and that the fields of probability and statistics provide a mathematical vehicle for realistically modeling the imperfections. Furthermore, the influence of different types of imperfection on the buckling load are examined and validated with experimental results.


2006 ◽  
Vol 306-308 ◽  
pp. 55-60
Author(s):  
I.S. Putra ◽  
T. Dirgantara ◽  
Firmansyah ◽  
M. Mora

In this paper, buckling analysis of cylindrical shells with a circumferential crack is presented. The analyses were performed both numerically using FEM and experimentally. The numerical analyses and experiments were conducted for several crack lengths and radius of curvature, and two different boundary conditions were applied, i.e. simply support and clamp in all sides. The results show the effect of the presence of crack to the critical buckling load of the shells. There are good agreements between experimental and numerical results.


Author(s):  
Peng Yang ◽  
Haofeng Liang ◽  
Jiahui Zhou ◽  
Jie Sun ◽  
Chenyu Shi ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Liu ◽  
Jian-Guo Gong ◽  
Fu-Hai Gao ◽  
Fu-Zhen Xuan

The buckling design criteria of elliptical heads in ASME VIII-1, ASME NH, and RCC-MRx are reviewed and compared. Accordingly, an external pressure chart (EPC) based buckling design approach is developed for elliptical heads in the creep range. Results indicate that for instantaneous buckling design, RCC-MRx predicts higher allowable pressure compared with ASME NH, which is ascribed to the smaller design factor. The proposed method produces a similar result with that given by ASME VIII-1. By contrast, the proposed method leads to a reasonably conservative result with the factor n of 0.03 for the creep buckling design. While the simplified method in RCC-MRx provides an over-conservative solution.


1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 155-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Berman ◽  
J. M. Chern ◽  
G. D. Gupta

The elastic-plastic-creep buckling of a long thin cylindrical shell with initial out-of-roundness subjected to uniform external pressure is herein studied. The work is carried out by means of an economical computer program which consistently accounts for the effects of load changes and plastic strains and which has a calculation procedure based on direct integration. The ratio of the sustained load to the initial buckling load is discovered to be a parameter which relates the sustained load to the buckling time without explicit reference to the geometric parameters for the conditions considered. Other results are uncovered concerning the effect of: the shape of the imperfection, the temperature variations and the choice of creep relations on initial buckling load and buckling time. Alternatives to the expensive and time consuming calculations to meet the requirements of the time factor of safety on Code Case 1331 of the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code for Class 1 nuclear components are explored. Recommendations are made.


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