Cyclic Tension Corrosion Fatigue of High-Strength Steels in Seawater

Author(s):  
WJD Jones ◽  
AP Blackie
2015 ◽  
Vol 651-653 ◽  
pp. 957-962 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Silvestre ◽  
Eneko Sáenz de Argandoña ◽  
Lander Galdos ◽  
Joseba Mendiguren

The roll levelling is a forming process used to remove the residual stresses and imperfections of metal strips by means of plastic deformations. The process is especially important to avoid final geometrical errors when coils are cold formed or when thick plates are cut by laser. In the last years, and due to the appearance of high strength materials such as Ultra High Strength Steels, machine design engineers are demanding a reliable tool for the dimensioning of the levelling facilities. In response to this demand, Finite Element Analysis is becoming an important technique able to lead engineers towards facilities optimization through a deeper understanding of the process.In this scenario, the accuracy and quality of the simulation results are highly dependent on the accuracy of the implemented material model. During roll levelling process, the sheet metal is subjected to cyclic tensile-compressive deformations, therefore a proper constitutive. model which considers the phenomena that occurs during cyclic loadings, such as the Bauschinger effec, work hardeningt and the transient behaviour, is needed. The prediction of all these phenomena which affect the final shape of the product are linked to the hardening rule.In the present paper, the roll levelling simulation of a DP1000 steel is performed using a combined isotropic-kinematic hardening formulation introduced by Chaboche and Lemaitre since its simplicity and its ability to predict the Bauschinger effect. The model has been fitted to the experimental curves obtained from a cyclic tension-compression test, which has been performed by means of a special tool developed to avoid the buckling of the specimen during compressive loadings. The model has been fitted using three different material hardening parameter identification methodologies which have been compared.


Author(s):  
Stephen J. Hudak ◽  
Guadalupe B. Robledo ◽  
Jeffrey Hawk

Although new high-strength steels have recently been developed to meet the demands of increased reservoir pressures, and sour production fluids, the corrosion-fatigue performance of these new higher-strength materials is largely unknown. The goal of this study was to fill this knowledge gap by generating corrosion-fatigue data in two aggressive environments: 1) a sour production brine, and 2) seawater with cathodic protection. The focus of the current paper is on stress-life (S-N) corrosion-fatigue results in these environments, as well as a baseline air environment. Experiments were performed on five different steels with yield strengths ranging from 848 MPa to 1080 MPa. Prior frequency-scan results based on corrosion-fatigue crack growth rate data demonstrated that not all of these material-environment combinations exhibit a saturation frequency where the detrimental environmental effect approached a constant value as the cyclic loading frequency is decreased. Consequently, S-N tests were performed at different frequencies (0.01 Hz, 0.17 Hz, and 1 Hz), depending on the fatigue life regime, in attempting to match the loading frequencies experienced in service. Corrosion-fatigue occurred at stresses well below the fatigue endurance limit in laboratory air, and cyclic lives in the seawater with cathodic protection environment were found to be 2X to 10X less than those in the baseline air environment, while cyclic lives in the sour brine environment were found to be 30X to 100X less than those in the baseline air environment. In both environments, degradation was greatest at lower stresses in the high cycle fatigue regime. The effect of material strength level had little or no measurable effect on the S-N corrosion-fatigue performance, and the effect of cyclic frequency on the corrosion-fatigue performance was mixed. The S-N response to these two variables differed significantly from recently measured fatigue crack growth kinetics in these same materials that were performed in a companion study. Possible reasons for these differences are discussed.


1986 ◽  
Vol 29 (255) ◽  
pp. 2765-2770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tsunenori OKADA ◽  
Shuji HATTORI ◽  
Shinichiro YAMAGISHI

Author(s):  
Feng Gui ◽  
Ramgopal Thodla ◽  
Ken Evans ◽  
Carlos Joia ◽  
Ilson Palmieri Baptista

Corrosion fatigue performance is of interest for high strength steels in riser applications. This work investigated the corrosion fatigue performance of 2507 duplex stainless steel for use as riser materials in environments containing high partial pressures of carbon dioxide (50–100 bar) and limited quantity of hydrogen sulfide (0–0.12 bar). The procedures developed for controlling oxygen and Fe2+ contamination as well as methods to evaluate the concentration of H2S in the autoclave are presented. The crack growth rates and ΔKth for these materials in the pressure environments were discussed along with procedures to obtain ΔKth, when they were below 5ksi√in. Low crack growth rates in the range of 1×10−8 in/cycle were measured and the effect of sour environments was quantified. The fatigue crack growth rate in sour environments on 2507 duplex stainless steel is a 10x higher than in air.


1981 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 517-523
Author(s):  
I. I. Vasilenko ◽  
V. I. Kapinos ◽  
A. M. Krutsan ◽  
B. I. Kultan

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