1,988 research outputs found

    A plastic load criterion for inelastic design by analysis

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    The allowable plastic load in pressure vessel design by analysis is determined by applying a graphical construction to a characteristic load-deformation plot of the collapse behavior of the vessel. This paper presents an alternative approach to the problem. The plastic response is characterized by considering the curvature of a plot of plastic work dissipated in the vessel against the applied load. It is proposed that salient points of curvature correspond to critical stages in the evolution of the gross plastic deformation mechanism. In the proposed plastic work curvature (PWC) criterion of plastic collapse, the plastic load is defined as the load corresponding to zero or minimal plastic work curvature after yielding and the formation of plastic mechanisms have occurred. Application of the proposed criterion is illustrated by considering the elastic-plastic response of a simple cantilever beam in bending and a complex three-dimensional finite element analysis of a nozzle intersection. The results show that the proposed approach gives higher values of plastic load than alternative criteria when the material exhibits strain hardening. It is proposed that this is because the PWC criterion more fully represents the constraining effect of material strain hardening on the spread of plastic deformation

    Racheting assessment of a fixed tube sheet heat exchanger subject to in-phase pressure and temperature cycles

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    An investigation of the cyclic elastic-plastic response of an Olefin plant heat exchanger subject to cyclic thermal and pressure loading is presented. Design by Analysis procedures for assessment of shakedown and ratcheting are considered, based on elastic and inelastic analysis methods. The heat exchanger tube sheet thickness is non-standard as it is considerably less than that required by conventional design by formula rules. Ratcheting assessment performed using elastic and stress linearization indicates that shakedown occurs under the specified loading when the non-linear component of the through thickness stress is categorized as peak stress. In practice, the presence of the peak stress will cause local reverse plasticity or plastic shakedown in the component. In non-linear analysis with an elastic-perfectly plastic material model the vessel exhibits incremental plastic strain accumulation for 10 full load cycles, with no indication that the configuration will adapt to steady state elastic or plastic action; i.e. elastic shakedown or plastic shakedown. However, the strain increments are small and would not lead to the development of a global plastic collapse or gross plastic deformation during the specified life of the vessel. Cyclic analysis based on a strain hardening material model indicates that the vessel will adapt to plastic shakedown after 6 load cycles. This indicates that the stress categorization and linearization assumptions made in the elastic analysis are valid for this configuration

    Stamina of a non-gasketed flange joint under combined internal pressure and axial loading

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    The performance of a bolted flange joint is characterized mainly by its 'strength' and 'sealing capability'. A number of numerical and experimental studies have been conducted to study these characteristics under internal pressure loading conditions alone. However, limited work is found in the literature under conditions of combined internal pressure and axial loading. The effect of external, axial loading pressure being unknown, the optimal performance of the bolted flange joint cannot be achieved. Current design codes do not address the effects of axial loading on structural integrity and sealing ability. To study joint strength and sealing capability under combined loading conditions, an extensive experimental and numerical study of a non-gasketed flange joint was carried out. Actual joint load capacity was determined at both design and test stages with the maximum external axial loading that can be applied for safe joint performance. Experimental and numerical results have been compared and overall joint performance and behaviour is discussed in detail

    Shotgun Start

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    2000-GT-0526 3D INVERSE METHOD FOR TURBOMACHINE BLADING WITH SPLITTER BLADES

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    ABSTRACT The use of a full 3D and viscous inverse method for turbomachine blading with splitter blades is demonstrated by carrying out a design modification of a transonic axial stator blade row with splitter blades. In this design modification study, the goal is to improve the aerodynamics of the full blade and the splitter blade, including weakening of shock wave and control of flow incidence. The improved blade design is "validated" using a well-known 3D Navier-Stokes analysis solver

    P. Persad

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    IJTC2007-44301 AN INVESTIGATION OF THREE DIMENSIONAL ELASTIC-PLASTIC HEMISPHERICAL SLIDING CONTACT, PART I: MODELING AND VALIDAITON

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    ABSTRACT This work presents a three dimensional (3D) finite element analysis (FEA) of an elastic-plastic hemispherical contact model for two hemispherical bodies sliding across each other with various preset vertical interferences. The boundary conditions, model simplifications, and the normalization scheme are presented. Sample results from this FEA investigation are compared to a semi-analytical solution to validate the methodology
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