A Fatigue Crack Growth Analysis Method Based on a Simple Representation of Crack-Tip Plasticity

Author(s):  
MF Kanninen ◽  
C Atkinson ◽  
CE Feddersen
2001 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 1283-1303 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Sadanandaa, Dorai-Nirmal V. Ramaswamy

2001 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 1283-1303 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Sadananda ◽  
D.N. V. Ramaswamy

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.


2007 ◽  
Vol 348-349 ◽  
pp. 105-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvie Pommier

Cyclic plasticity in the crack tip region is at the origin of various history effects in fatigue. For instance, fatigue crack growth in mode I is delayed after the application of an overload because of the existence of compressive residual stresses in the overload’s plastic zone. Moreover, if the overload’s ratio is large enough, the crack may grow under mixed mode condition until it has gone round the overload’s plastic zone. Thus, crack tip plasticity modifies both the kinetics and the crack’s plane. Therefore modeling the growth of a fatigue crack under complex loading conditions requires considering the effects of crack tip plasticity. Finite element analyses are useful for analyzing crack tip plasticity under various loading conditions. However, the simulation of mixed mode fatigue crack growth by elastic-plastic finite element computations leads to huge computation costs, in particular if the crack doesn’t remain planer. Therefore, in this paper, the finite element method is employed only to build a global constitutive model for crack tip plasticity under mixed mode loading conditions. Then this model can be employed, independently of any FE computation, in a mixed mode fatigue crack growth criterion including memory effects inherited from crack tip plasticity. This model is developed within the framework of the thermodynamics of dissipative processes and includes internal variables that allow modeling the effect of internal stresses and to account for memory effects. The model was developed initially for pure mode I conditions. It was identified and validated for a 0.48%C carbon steel. It was shown that the model allows modeling fatigue crack growth under various variable amplitude loading conditions [1]. The present paper aims at showing that a similar approach can be applied for mixed mode loading conditions so as to model, finally, mixed mode fatigue crack growth.


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