Effect of the interpass temperature on the predicted residual stress distributions in a multipass welded piping branch junction

2008 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Jiang ◽  
K Yahiaoui

A sequentially coupled three‐dimensional thermomechanical finite element model has been developed to predict residual stress distributions in a multipass welded piping branch junction. The residual stresses at the branch and run pipe cross‐sections, as well as along the circumferential weldlines on the outer surfaces of both the run and the branch pipes and on the inner surface of the branch pipe, are predicted. Three levels of interpass temperature have been selected to investigate their effect on the peak residual stresses. It is revealed that the interpass temperature has a significant effect on the residual stresses. As the interpass temperature is increased, both the peak hoop and the axial residual stresses at the run and branch cross‐sections decrease. The peak normal stresses along the circumferential weldline on the outer surface of the run pipes are also reduced. However, increasing the interpass temperature had a negligible effect on the peak tangential residual stresses along the circumferential weld line on the inner surface of the branch pipe. The results presented and the modelling technique described in the current study can be used towards formulating a recommendation to optimize residual stress profiles in multipass welded complex geometries through better interpass temperature control.

2018 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 210-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Barsanti ◽  
Marco Beghini ◽  
Ciro Santus ◽  
Alessio Benincasa ◽  
Lorenzo Bertelli

The ring-core technique allows for the determination of non-uniform residual stresses from the surface up to relatively higher depths as compared to the hole-drilling technique. The integral method, which is usually applied to hole-drilling, can also be used for elaborating the results of the ring-core test since these two experimental techniques share the axisymmetric geometry and the 0°–45°–90° layout of the strain gage rosette. The aim of this article is to provide accurate coefficients which can be used for evaluating the residual stress distribution by the ring-core integral method. The coefficients have been obtained by elaborating the results of a very refined plane harmonic axisymmetric finite element model and verified with an independent three-dimensional model. The coefficients for small depth steps were initially provided, and then the values for multiple integer step depths were also derived by manipulating the high-resolution coefficient matrices, thus showing how the present results can be practically used for obtaining the residual stresses according to different depth sequences, even non-uniform. This analysis also allowed the evaluation of the eccentricity effect which turned out to be negligible due to the symmetry of the problem. An applicative example was reported in which the input of the experimentally measured relaxed strains was elaborated with different depth resolutions, and the obtained residual stress distributions were compared.


Author(s):  
Nobuyoshi Yanagida

Effects of pipe dimensions and outer surface-buttering weld conditions on residual stress distributions were evaluated using the finite element method. Residual stresses were analyzed for 508–mm-diameter (500A) pipe 38.1 mm thick, 508–mm-diameter (500A) pipe 15.1 mm thick, and 267–mm-diameter (250A) pipe 15.1 mm thick. After the residual stresses at pipe butt joints were analyzed, residual stresses at these joints subjected to the outer surface-buttering welds were analyzed. Residual stresses were determined for various weld widths, thicknesses, and heat inputs. These analyses indicate that tensile axial stress occurred at inner surface of the pipe butt joint and that it decreased with increasing the outer surface buttering-weld width or heat input. They also indicate that compressive hoop stress occurred at inner surface of the joint and that outer surface-buttering weld increased it. The outer surface-buttering weld conditions that generate compressive residual stress at the inner surface of the pipe butt joints were determined.


1986 ◽  
Vol 108 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. F. Rybicki ◽  
J. R. Shadley

The accuracy of a destructive, experimental method for the evaluation of through-thickness residual stress distributions is investigated. The application of the method is to a welded pipe that has been subjected to a residual stress improvement process. The residual stress improvement process introduces gradients in the stress distribution. The question of interest is how well the back-computation method used to interpret the experimental data represents the residual stress distribution for this type of stress profile. To address this question, a finite element model was used to provide a reference stress solution for comparison with the back-computation results of the experimental method. Three-dimensional finite element stress analyses were also conducted to simulate the cutting steps of the destructive laboratory procedure. The residual stress distributions obtained by the back-computation procedure were then compared with the reference stress solutions provided by the finite element model. The comparisons show agreement and indicate that good results can be expected from the experimental method when it is applied to a pipe that has been subjected to a residual stress improvement process, provided that the axial gradient of stress is not too large.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Sutton ◽  
A. P. Reynolds ◽  
D.-Q. Wang ◽  
C. R. Hubbard

Three-dimensional residual stress mapping of an aluminum 2024-T3 arcan specimen, butt-welded by the friction stir technique, was performed by neutron diffraction. Results indicate that the residual stress distribution profiles across the weld region are asymmetric with respect to the weld centerline, with the largest gradients in the measured residual stress components occurring on the advancing side of the weld, with the longitudinal stress, σL, oriented along the weld line, as the largest stress. Within the region inside the shoulder diameter, the through-thickness stress, σZ, is entirely compressive, with large gradients occurring along the transverse direction just beyond the shoulder region. In addition, results indicate a significant reduction in the observed residual stresses for a transverse section that was somewhat closer to the free edge of an Arcan specimen. Microstructural studies indicate that the grain size in the weld nugget, is approximately 6.4 microns, with the maximum extent of the recrystallized zone extending to 6 mm on each side of the weld centerline. Outside of this region, the plate material has an unrecrystallized grain structure that consists of pancake shaped grains ranging up to several mm in size in two dimensions and 10 microns in through-thickness dimension.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 601-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Jiang ◽  
Kadda Yahiaoui

Piping branch junctions and nozzle attachments to main pressure vessels are common engineering components used in the power, oil and gas, and shipbuilding industries amongst others. These components are usually fabricated by multipass welding. The latter process is known to induce residual stresses at the fabrication stage, which can have severe adverse effects on the in-service behavior of such critical components. It is thus desirable if the distributions of residual stresses can be predicted well in advance of welding execution. This paper presents a comprehensive study of three dimensional residual stress distributions in a stainless steel tee branch junction during a multipass welding process. A full three dimensional thermomechanical finite element model has been developed for this purpose. A newly developed meshing technique has been used to model the complex intersection areas of the welded junction with all hexahedral elements. Element removal/reactivate technique has been employed to simulate the deposition of filler material. Material, geometry, and boundary nonlinearities associated with welding were all taken into account. The analysis results are presented in the form of stress distributions circumferentially along the weld line on both run and branch pipes as well as at the run and branch cross sections. In general, this computational model is capable of predicting three dimensional through-thickness welding residual stress, which can be valuable for structural integrity assessments of complex welded geometries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 40-45
Author(s):  
Ali Aminifar ◽  
Alireza M. Haghighi

Welding is a process of permanent joining parts by different welding methods. Residual stress and distortion are the most common phenomena of this process. Reduction of the residual stresses, distortion and improving the quality of welding are the important subjects of this field. Determining and analyzing the residual stresses and distortion is the main step for these purposes. Welding sequences, speed and current are the most effective parameters of this process. In this study, effects of welding parameters such as welding speed and current, in order to reduce residual stress and distortion of welding ST52 rolled plate in different welding sequences have been studied with three-dimensional thermo-mechanical finite element model by means of ANSYS APDL. By comparing different considered situations, the most efficient welding methods with the least residual stress and distortion by considering different welding sequences have been suggested. It obtains that welding the ST52 rolled plate from edge to edge with higher current and lower speed is the best option in fatigue and load-bearing situations, and welding from the center to both sides simultaneously with lower current and higher speed is the best option for assembly problems.


Author(s):  
Nobuyoshi Yanagida ◽  
Kazuo Ogawa ◽  
Koichi Saito ◽  
Ed Kingston

The stress-redistribution phenomenon in a vessel penetration set-on joint due to post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) was studied using finite element (FE) analyses and mocked-up experiments. The mocked-up consisted of a nickel-based alloy (NCF600) tube welded onto an alloy-82 cladded, low-alloy steel plate (SQV2A) using an alloy-182 butt weld. The angle of the tube to the plate surface was 45 degrees, simulating a side hill, a control rod drive (CRD), and a stub-tube nozzle attachment used in boiling-water reactor (BWR) plants. PWHT at a temperature of 625 °C was conducted after welding and then the inner surface of the tube was machined. Three-dimensional FE modeling was performed to simulate the cladding, the butt weld, the PWHT, and the inner-surface machining of the tube. Thermal elasto-plastic and thermal elasto-plastic creep analyses were conducted to simulate the process of residual-stress build up and its redistribution by PWHT. To validate the FE analysis, the residual stresses in the mocked-up specimen were experimentally measured using the deep-hole-drilling (DHD) and sectioning methods. The analytical and experimental results revealed that residual-stress redistributions in the mocked-up specimen were different in circumferential positions. High-residual stresses in the low-alloy steel plate were particularly mitigated during the PWHT. The stress relief in the low-alloy steel plate primarily controlled the global stress balance between the cladding, the weld metal, and the stub tube.


Author(s):  
M Sedighi ◽  
J MosayebNezhad

In this study, the influence of welding parameters on the distribution of residual stress in magnetically impelled arc butt welded joints was investigated. As major contributing factors to the quality of weldments and residual stress, welding time and welding upsetting pressure were focal points of this work. Experimentally verified thermal-metallurgical and mechanical finite element model was used for conducting this purpose. The effects of phase change including volumetric phase change and transformation plasticity were considered in the numerical model. Based on the numerical simulation it was observed that for instance by increasing upset pressure from 0 to 130 MPa, axial residual stresses have reduced from −210 MPa to −119 MPa, while by increasing welding time from 4 to 6 s, these stresses have increased from −119 MPa to −138 MPa on the outer surface of the weld line.


2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Ai ◽  
Xinhai Yu ◽  
Wenchun Jiang ◽  
Wanchuck Woo ◽  
Xiaofeng Ze ◽  
...  

In this study, for the hard-facing of spring-loaded pressure relief valve seats, the residual stress distributions after the tungsten inert gas welding, (TIG) postwelded heat treatment and subsequent surface turning were investigated. The heat input parameters of welding were calibrated using an infrared imaging and thermocouples. The residual stress distributions were computed using three-dimensional finite element model. The neutron diffraction approach was employed to verify the finite element calculation. It is found that, the surface temperature during hard-facing welding shows a double ellipsoidal shape with the highest value of around 1570 °C. The high residual stress zones are located exactly under the welded joint except a slight deviation in the hoop direction. The magnitudes of tensile residual stresses in the three directions increase with their corresponding locations from the root of the joint into the base metal. The residual stresses in all of the three directions decrease significantly after the heat treatment. After surface turning, the residual stresses are tensile except for those close to the inner surface that are compressive in axial and radial directions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 44-47 ◽  
pp. 581-585
Author(s):  
Lei Wang ◽  
Qi Lin Zhang ◽  
Lu Chen

A thermal-mechanical coupled finite element model has been presented to predict residual and thermal stresses during different stages of stud welding. The finite study was carried out using three-dimensional models. To enhance the accuracy of the numerical solution material properties including physical, thermal and mechanical properties supposed to be temperature-dependent. After the temperature distributions as a result of welding were calculated, thermal and residual stress values obtained. Residual stresses are attributed to the elasto-plastic response of the object towards the transient thermal stresses generated by the welding. After all temperature values reach the room temperature, the residual stresses decrease to a small value.


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