153 research outputs found
Influence of welding parameters on the welding residual stresses
FE simulation of welds from austenitic steel was carried out in the current paper. Two different multi-pass welds were modelled. Measurements of welding residual stresses, which were found in literature, were applied for the validation of the results. The validated models were then used as basis for sensitivity analysis. The influence of differentiating the welding speed, the heat input of the weld heat source, intermediate cooling between consecutive weld-passes and welding sequence on the welding residual stresses was investigated
On the gradient of the yield plateau in structural carbon steels
New design methodologies are being developed to allow stocky steel members to attain and exceed the full plastic condition. For theoretical validation, such methods require a characterisation of the uniaxial stress-strain behaviour of structural steel beyond an idealised elastic-plastic representation. However, the strain hardening properties of carbon steels are not currently guaranteed by the standards or by any steel manufacturer. Assumptions must thus be made on what values of these properties are appropriate, often based on limited information in the form of individual stress-strain curves. There is very little consistency in the choices made. This paper first illustrates, using an example elastic-plastic finite element calculation, that a stocky tubular structure can attain the full plastic condition at slendernesses comparable with those defined in current standards and supported by experiment when using only a very modest level of strain hardening, initiated at first yield. It is then hypothesised that the yield plateau in the stress-strain curve for structural carbon steels, classically treated as flat and with zero tangent modulus, actually has a small but statistically significant positive finite gradient. Finally, a robust set of linear regression analyses of yield plateau gradients extracted from 225 tensile tests appears to support this hypothesis, finding that the plateau gradient is of the order of 0.3% of the initial elastic modulus, consistent with what the finite element example suggests is sufficient to reproduce the full plastic condition at experimentally-supported slendernesses
Low cost estimation of Wöhler and Goodman–Haigh curves of Ti-6Al-4V samples by considering the stress ratio effect
The stress ratio effect on the fatigue life of materials is a topic which have been studied by two different approaches. On the one hand, several experiments, performed under different stress ratios are necessary to estimate the corresponding Wöhler curves. Afterwards, these curves are considered to estimate the fatigue life under a particular stress range. On the other hand, fatigue failure criteria for fluctuating stress like the Goodman–Haigh relationship, are applied to estimate the stress amplitude for a constant fatigue life. Based on the Stüssi function, this paper presents a low cost model to estimate Wöhler curves and constant fatigue Goodman–Haigh diagrams. This procedure requires a set of tests performed under a particular stress ratio from LCF to HCF, and data from minimum two additional stress ranges for each subsequent stress ratio. An application on data from Ti-6Al-4V samples manufactured by selective laser melting (SLM) is presented
The El Niño – La Niña cycle and recent trends in supply and demand of net primary productivity in African drylands
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2016. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Climatic Change 138 (2016): 111-125, doi:10.1007/s10584-016-1730-1.Inter-annual climatic variability over a large portion of sub-Saharan Africa is under the influence of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Extreme variability in climate is a threat to rural livelihoods in sub-Saharan Africa, yet the role of ENSO in the balance between supply and demand of net primary productivity (NPP) over this region is unclear. Here, we analyze the impact of ENSO on this balance in a spatially explicit framework using gridded population data from the WorldPop project, satellite-derived data on NPP supply, and statistical data from the United Nations. Our analyses demonstrate that between 2000 and 2013 fluctuations in the supply of NPP associated with moderate ENSO events average ±2.8 g C m-2 yr-1 across sub-Saharan drylands. The greatest sensitivity is in arid Southern Africa where a +1oC change in the Niño-3.4 sea surface temperature index is associated with a mean change in NPP supply of -6.6 g C m-2 yr-1. Concurrently, the population-driven trend in NPP demand averages 3.5 g C m-2 yr-1 over the entire region with densely populated urban areas exhibiting the highest mean demand for NPP. Our findings highlight the importance of accounting for the role ENSO plays in modulating the balance between supply and demand of NPP in sub-Saharan drylands. An important implication of these findings is that increase in NPP demand for socio-economic metabolism must be taken into account within the context of climate-modulated supplyFunding for this project was provided by the Swedish National Space Board (contract no. 100/11 to J.A.). A.M.A. received support from the Royal Physiographic Society in Lund and the Lund University Center for Studies of Carbon Cycle and Climate Interactions (LUCCI). C.C.U. was supported by NSF grant OCE-1203892.2017-07-0
Interdisziplinäres Schockraum-Management unfallchirurgischer Patienten aus der Sicht der Mitarbeitenden
Zusammenfassung: Einleitung: Wir untersuchten, ob die Mitarbeiterbefragung in der Qualitätskontrolle des Schockraum-Managements von Nutzen sein kann. Methode: Konsekutive anonyme schriftliche Befragung (15Fragen, Likert-Skala 1-5) der klinisch Mitarbeitenden aller Schockraumeinsätze mit Verdacht auf Mehrfachverletzung von Juli 2002 bis Dezember 2003 (Anova; p<0,05). Ergebnisse: Bei 171 unfallchirurgischen Einsätzen retournierten 884Beteiligte den Antwortbogen. Die Beobachtungen der Mitarbeitenden hingen signifikant von der jeweiligen Schockraumsituation ab. Am meisten kritisiert wurden das Zeitmanagement und die eigene Ausbildung (Likert-Skala <4). Leitende- und Oberärzte bewerteten ihren Ausbildungsstand besser als Assistenzärzte und hatten häufiger einen ATLS®-Kurs absolviert (p<0,001). Es fanden sich signifikante systematische Unterschiede in den Beurteilungen, z.B. je nach Fachdisziplin der Antwortenden. Schlussfolgerung: Unser Fragebogen erwies sich als gut diskriminierendes Instrument und kann somit die Erfassung klinischer Parameter im Qualitätsmanagement der Schockraumphase sinnvoll ergänzen. Vor einer breiteren Anwendung werden allerdings zusätzliche Validierungs- und Korrelationsuntersuchungen benötig
Fatigue Life of Welded High-Strength Steels under Gaussian Loads
Within the scope of the investigation of welded high-strength steels for application in crane structures, a Gaussian-like test spectrum is derived from an analysis of recorded load time histories. In addition to stress-controlled fatigue tests under constant amplitude loading, the test spectrum is used for the experimental investigation of MAG-welded butt joints and tubular sample components under variable amplitude loading. A linear damage accumulation using Palmgren-Miner-Elementary is conservative for a damage sum of D = 0.5. Application of the theoretical damage sum Dth = 1 results in a closer approximation of the GaĂźner-curve. For further improvement of this approximation, a rotation of the calculated GaĂźner-curve, i.e. a variable damage sum, is suggested for both butt joints and sample components
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A Vision for Transdisciplinarity in Future Earth: Perspectives from Young Researchers
Meeting the demand for food, energy, and water as world population increases is a major goal for the food systems of the future. These future challenges, which are complex, multiscalar, and cross-sectoral in nature, require a food systems approach that recognizes the socio-ecological and socio-technical dimensions of food (Ericksen, 2008; Ingram, 2011; Rivera-Ferre, 2012). The United Nations' Future Earth Program aims to provide a new platform for consolidating the knowledge required for societies to transition to global sustainability (Future Earth Transition Team, 2012). In this paper, we explore how Future Earth could become a vehicle for inspiring the production of new research ideas and collaborations for sustainably transforming the future food system. We do this on the basis of a synthesis of views from 28 young (below 40 years old) food system scientists, representing five continents. Their expertise comes from disciplines including food engineering, agronomy, ecology, geography, psychology, public health, food politics, nutritional science, political science, sociology and sustainability science. This paper begins with an outline of the institutional framework of Future Earth and how it might support innovative transdisciplinary research on food systems, and the position of young scientists within this framework. Secondly, we outline the key insights expressed by the young scientists during the Food Futures Conference in Villa Vigoni, Italy, in April 2013, including the core research questions raised during the meeting as well as some of the challenges involved in realizing their research ambitions within their professional spheres
Correction to Residual stress relaxation in HFMI amp; 8209;treated fillet welds after single overload peaks
The article Residual stress relaxation in HFMI treated fillet welds after single overload peaks, written by Jan Schubnell, Eva Carl, Majid Farajian, Stefanos Gkatzogiannis, Peter Knödel, Thomas Ummenhofer, Robert Wimpory and Hamdollah Eslami, was originally published Online First without Open Access. After publication in volume 64, issue 6, page 1107 1117 the author decided to opt for Open Choice and to make the article an Open Access publication. Therefore, the copyright of the article has been changed to The Author s 2020 and the article is forthwith distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Attribution 4. 0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author s and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http creativecommons.org licenses by 4.
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