scholarly journals Identification of Residual Stress Phenomena Based on the Hole Drilling Method in Explosively Welded Steel-Titanium Composite

2014 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 1119-1123 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Karolczuk ◽  
M. Kowalski ◽  
K. Kluger ◽  
F. Żok

Abstract The hole drilling method was used to determine residual stresses in bimetallic composite manufactured by explosive welding process. The analyzed bimetal consist of titanium Grade 1 (6mm) and S355J2+N steel (40mm). The aim of the paper is to establish the influence of the heat treatment on residual stress state in titanium layer. Residual stress calculations were performed according to standards developed by strain gauge manufacturer (TML) and ASTM standards. The main conclusion is the heat treatment considerably changes the residual stress state in titanium layer from tensile stress state (no heat treatment) to compression stress state (after the heat treatment).

Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 156
Author(s):  
Steffen Tinkloh ◽  
Tao Wu ◽  
Thomas Tröster ◽  
Thomas Niendorf

In this paper, fiber waviness, as one of the most frequently occurring defects in fiber reinforced composites, is numerically investigated with regard to the formation of residual stresses in fiber metal laminates. Furthermore, the prediction of the residual stress state in the thickness direction by means of the simulated hole drilling method is studied. To this regard, a global-local finite element analysis based on the submodel technique is presented. The submodel technique essentially consists of two governing steps: In the first step, a global model is first utilized to calculate and analyze the residual stress distribution and deformation in the intrinsically joined hybrid structure. Effective cure-dependent thermo–elastic properties predicted by a numerical homogenization procedure were used to simulate the curing-process and analyze the residual stresses state. However, the dimension of the intrinsically manufactured hybrid plate is large compared to the diameter of the drilled hole (2 mm), so that a local model is necessary, which provides only a geometric partial portion of the global model. The local model takes the global stress state into account and is subsequently used to simulate the incremental hole drilling method with a refined mesh discretization. The production-related fiber waviness is modeled by an element-wise orientation approximating a sinus function. In order to validate the global-local modeling approach, a comparison between numerical results and experimental data from literature is presented. The comparison between global residual stress state (global model) and the simulated hole drilling method (local model) is used to assess the applicability and reliability of the hole drilling method in case of fiber waviness. It is found that an in-plane fiber waviness leads to a rather low variance of residual stresses over thickness. In case of an out-of-plane fiber waviness, oscillating residual stress fields occur over the entire thickness along the fiber direction. Moreover, the current limits of the incremental hole drilling method could be pointed out by the presented investigations. It is seen that the simulated results of the incremental hole drilling method are sensitive to waviness, even if the amplitude-wavelength-ratio is small. Without further adjustment of the calibration coefficients the oscillating stress and strain fields lead, in particular fiber waviness in thickness direction, to unreliable predictions. For the experimental application it can be concluded that the specimens have to be carefully examined with regard to fiber waviness.


2012 ◽  
Vol 726 ◽  
pp. 125-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksander Karolczuk ◽  
Krzysztof Kluger ◽  
Mateusz Kowalski ◽  
Fabian Żok ◽  
Grzegorz Robak

The main aim of the paper is determination of residual stresses in explosively welded steel-titanium bimetal. The analysis considers two bimetallic specimens: before and after the heat treatment. In residual stress determination the hole drilling method along with finite element analysis were applied. The results show different residual stress states depending on the heat treatment. The obtained results are confirmed by thermal stress calculation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 996 ◽  
pp. 488-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nico Hempel ◽  
Thomas Nitschke-Pagel ◽  
Klaus Dilger

In this study, the mechanics of the residual stress development in multi-pass butt-welded joints of ferritic-pearlitic steel pipes are investigated. Therefore, the effects of the welding process and its parameters, as well as the impact of the preheating temperature on the residual stress state are studied by determining the temperature profile during welding and performing X-ray diffraction measurements on the pipes inner and outer surfaces. Additionally, residual stress depth distributions are determined using the incremental hole-drilling method. The residual stress distributions can be explained by phase transformations and thermal shrinkage, the latter being the governing mechanism in the tubular geometry of the welds.


2007 ◽  
Vol 7-8 ◽  
pp. 133-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.M. Anawa ◽  
Abdul Ghani Olabi

Dissimilar metal welds between Ferritic steel and Austenitic steel (F/A)are commonly used in power plants, food industry, pharmaceutical industry and many other applications. There are many issues/problems associated with the joining of dissimilar materials, depending on the materials being joined and the process selected. During the laser welding process, residual stresses are introduced by a rise in temperature during the melting or heating process followed by a very quick cooling of the weld and the surrounding material. In this study, CO2 continuous laser welding has been successfully applied for joining 316 stainless steel with AISI 1009 low carbon steel F/A. Design of Experiment techniques (DOE) has been used for some of the selected welding parameters (laser power, welding speed, and focus position) to model the dissimilar F/A joints in terms of its residual stresses. The Hole-Drilling Method technique was use for measuring the residual stress of dissimilar welded components. Taguchi approach for selected welding parameters was applied and the output response was the residual stresses. The results were analysed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and signal-tonoise (S/N) ratios for the effective parameters combination.


2005 ◽  
Vol 490-491 ◽  
pp. 102-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
De Lin Rao ◽  
Zheng Qiang Zhu ◽  
Li Gong Chen ◽  
Chunzhen Ni

The existence of residual stresses caused by the welding process is an important reason of cracking and distortion in welded metal structures that may affect the fatigue life and dimensional stability significantly. Heat treatment is one of the traditional methods to relieve the residual stresses. But it is often limited by the manufacturing condition and the size of the structures. In this paper a procedure called vibratory stress relief (VSR) is discussed. VSR is a process to reduce and re-distribute the internal residual stresses of welded structures by means of post-weld mechanical vibration. The effectiveness of VSR on the residual stresses of welded structures, including the drums of hoist machine and thick stainless steel plate are investigated. Parameters of VSR procedure are described in the paper. Residual stresses on weld bead are measured before and after VSR treatment by hole-drilling method and about 30%~50% reduction of residual stresses are observed. The results show that VSR process can reduce the residual stress both middle carbon steel (Q345) and stainless steel (304L) welded structures effectively.


2018 ◽  
Vol 237 ◽  
pp. 01012
Author(s):  
David Halabuk ◽  
Tomas Navrat

One of the most popular and widely used technique for measuring residual stresses is the hole-drilling method. By this method, it is possible to evaluate only biaxial residual stresses located in plane parallel to the surface, but some processes produce a triaxial stress state. For this reason, the evaluation of triaxial stress state by the method used for biaxial state was assessed in this paper. A hole-drilling experiment was simulated by the finite element method for two different stress states. The first stress state considered constant residual stresses in all directions. The second one considered constant residual stresses in a plane parallel to the surface and the residual stress in a direction perpendicular to the surface was equal to zero on the surface and increased with depth. Both states were simulated for various ratios of stress in a direction perpendicular to the stresses in plane. The obtained results show that residual stress in a perpendicular direction affects the evaluation of residual stresses in plane. If the residual stress in the perpendicular direction is high compared to stresses in plane, the error produced by the evaluation of triaxial stress state by the method for biaxial stress state can also be high. 1 Introduction


2013 ◽  
Vol 486 ◽  
pp. 16-19
Author(s):  
Karel Vitek

The hole drilling method used for the stress state identification is currently standardized by the E 837 international standard. It is based on relaxation of the residual stress in vicinity of the drilled hole. Relaxation of the residual stress relieves deformations which are measured with strain gage rosette. However, using the theory E 837 does not correct the influence of the experimental hole imperfections (eccentricity, roundness, perpendicularity) on this experimental method accuracy. This article analyzes the extent of errors that affect these imperfections.


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