scholarly journals 1002 Inverse Analysis Method of the Optimum Temperature History Minimizing the Maximum Transient Stress Intensity Factor by Smoothing Time-Variation of Stress Intensity Factor

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011.24 (0) ◽  
pp. 332-333
Author(s):  
Mitsumasa MAEKAWA ◽  
Shiro KUBO ◽  
Seiji IOKA
Author(s):  
Seiji Ioka ◽  
Shiro Kubo ◽  
Mayumi Ochi ◽  
Kiminobu Hojo

Thermal fatigue may develop in piping elbow with high temperature stratified flow. To prevent the fatigue damage by stratified flow, it is important to know the distribution of thermal stress and temperature history in a pipe. In this study, heat conduction inverse analysis method for piping elbow was developed to estimate the temperature history and thermal stress distribution on the inner surface from the outer surface temperature history. In the inverse analysis method, the inner surface temperature was estimated by using the transfer function database which interrelates the inner surface temperature with the outer surface temperature. Transfer function database was calculated by FE analysis in advance. For some patterns of the temperature history, inverse analysis simulations were made. It was found that the inner surface temperature history was estimated with high accuracy.


1985 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 585-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.-S. Kim

Results of experiments on crack-face impact are presented. The transient stress-intensity factor variation of a crack has been traced by the Stress-Intensity Factor Tracer (SIFT) [1] under time-stepwise uniform pressure loading of the crack faces. To see the effects of various waves generated by the loading, part of the crack faces was left free of traction within the distance l0 from the crack tip. The crack-face impact loading was produced by an electromagnetic force induced by a square pulse of an electric current flowing through a copper strip inserted in the saw-cut crack of a Homalite 100 plate specimen. The current flowed in opposite directions in the two portions of the copper strip, between the crack faces, causing them to repel each other. The short-time and the long-time behavior of the transient stress-intensity factor variation under the impact loading have been carefully investigated. Brittle dynamic initiation of crack extension and the stress-intensity variation of a running crack have been also examined. The experimental results have been compared with theoretical predictions based on Freund’s crack-face concentrated load solution [2]. The agreement between the theory and the experiment is excellent. In this study, the various waves generated by the loading are shown to play different roles in transmitting the load to the crack tip. In addition, confirmation is given that the SIFT is excellent in tracing the stress-intensity factor regardless of the crack-tip motion.


Author(s):  
Zhenshun Liu ◽  
Hongdong Zhen

The fatigue crack growth analysis of nuclear piping is a nonlinear calculation process. The loading sequence and combination mode could affect the results. How to consider these effects is unclear. Fatigue crack growth analysis includes a large number of nonlinear iterative calculations, and the calculation speed is slow. This paper selects carbon steel nuclear piping as the research object. Based on the analysis process provided by ASME code XI volume, a simplified analysis method is explored by introducing the reference crack depth a’ and the envelope transient. The simplified analysis method is conservative because it has been proved that the crack growth rate is positively related to the crack size only if the maximum stress intensity factor is greater than 0 and the minimum stress intensity factor is less than 0. The simplified analysis method is proved to be able to significantly improve the calculation speed by comparing the number of iterative calculations in the simplified analysis method and in the conventional analysis method. The results indicate that the simplified analysis method could provide a conservative way of loading and combining the complex transients and could significantly reduce the number of nonlinear iterative calculations in the process of crack fatigue growth analysis for carbon steel nuclear piping when the maximum stress intensity factor greater than 0 and the minimum stress intensity factor is less than 0.


2012 ◽  
Vol 525-526 ◽  
pp. 85-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shi Ming Dong ◽  
Qing Yuan Wang

In order to solve the problem how to calculate the stress intensity factor for a cracked flattened Brazilian disk under mode I loading, the finite element method was employed to analyze the stress intensity factor for the cracked flattened Brazilian disk under mode I loading, based on the closed-form expression of the stress intensity factor for a cracked Brazilian disk subjected to pressure. The analyzed result shows that within the certain range of the load distribution angle, the formula of the stress intensity factor for the cracked Brazilian disk can be directly used to calculate the stress intensity factor for the cracked flattened Brazilian disk under mode I loading.


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