A modified nominal stress method for fatigue assessment of steel plates with thermally cut edges
Peippo, Juha (2015-12-18)
Väitöskirja
Peippo, Juha
18.12.2015
Lappeenranta University of Technology
Acta Universitatis Lappeenrantaensis
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-906-4
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-906-4
Tiivistelmä
Thermal cutting methods, are commonly used in the manufacture of metal parts.
Thermal cutting processes separate materials by using heat. The process can be done
with or without a stream of cutting oxygen. Common processes are Oxygen, plasma and
laser cutting. It depends on the application and material which cutting method is used.
Numerically-controlled thermal cutting is a cost-effective way of prefabricating
components. One design aim is to minimize the number of work steps in order to
increase competitiveness. This has resulted in the holes and openings in plate parts
manufactured today being made using thermal cutting methods. This is a problem from
the fatigue life perspective because there is local detail in the as-welded state that causes
a rise in stress in a local area of the plate. In a case where the static utilization of a net
section is full used, the calculated linear local stresses and stress ranges are often over 2
times the material yield strength. The shakedown criteria are exceeded.
Fatigue life assessment of flame-cut details is commonly based on the nominal stress
method. For welded details, design standards and instructions provide more accurate
and flexible methods, e.g. a hot-spot method, but these methods are not universally
applied to flame cut edges.
Some of the fatigue tests of flame cut edges in the laboratory indicated that fatigue life
estimations based on the standard nominal stress method can give quite a conservative
fatigue life estimate in cases where a high notch factor was present. This is an
undesirable phenomenon and it limits the potential for minimizing structure size and
total costs.
A new calculation method is introduced to improve the accuracy of the theoretical
fatigue life prediction method of a flame cut edge with a high stress concentration
factor. Simple equations were derived by using laboratory fatigue test results, which are
published in this work. The proposed method is called the modified FAT method
(FATmod). The method takes into account the residual stress state, surface quality,
material strength class and true stress ratio in the critical place.
Thermal cutting processes separate materials by using heat. The process can be done
with or without a stream of cutting oxygen. Common processes are Oxygen, plasma and
laser cutting. It depends on the application and material which cutting method is used.
Numerically-controlled thermal cutting is a cost-effective way of prefabricating
components. One design aim is to minimize the number of work steps in order to
increase competitiveness. This has resulted in the holes and openings in plate parts
manufactured today being made using thermal cutting methods. This is a problem from
the fatigue life perspective because there is local detail in the as-welded state that causes
a rise in stress in a local area of the plate. In a case where the static utilization of a net
section is full used, the calculated linear local stresses and stress ranges are often over 2
times the material yield strength. The shakedown criteria are exceeded.
Fatigue life assessment of flame-cut details is commonly based on the nominal stress
method. For welded details, design standards and instructions provide more accurate
and flexible methods, e.g. a hot-spot method, but these methods are not universally
applied to flame cut edges.
Some of the fatigue tests of flame cut edges in the laboratory indicated that fatigue life
estimations based on the standard nominal stress method can give quite a conservative
fatigue life estimate in cases where a high notch factor was present. This is an
undesirable phenomenon and it limits the potential for minimizing structure size and
total costs.
A new calculation method is introduced to improve the accuracy of the theoretical
fatigue life prediction method of a flame cut edge with a high stress concentration
factor. Simple equations were derived by using laboratory fatigue test results, which are
published in this work. The proposed method is called the modified FAT method
(FATmod). The method takes into account the residual stress state, surface quality,
material strength class and true stress ratio in the critical place.
Kokoelmat
- Väitöskirjat [1102]