Russ A
Mechanical
- Sep 4, 2024
- 7
Hi all,
I seem to have found an unusual situation (from my experience anyway) whereby Elastic-Plastic results are more onerous than Limit-Load and only slightly better than ASME VIII Div 1 hand calcs. I am using ANSYS and have tried many different solver settings, mesh etc. (and have had discussions within ANSYS with regard to the issues I am experiencing) and am reasonably confident that the ANSYS result is what it is and is likely a reasonably reflection of the physical system.
The issue I am having is that the FEA model fails to converge before utilising the full elastic-plastic material model i.e. the material would appear to have more load capacity that is not being utilised, as it fails to converge at about half the plastic strain of the plastic strain at true UTS (i.e. well within the bounds of the material model). Failure is also due to strains in the plain cylinder rather than e.g. a nozzle, where high strains would normally be expected. The pressure at which non-convergence occurs is lower than the pressure at which a limit load analysis fails to converge.
From running various test cases I believe this is related to large deflection being activated for elastic-plastic cases, which it is not for limit load (small displacement theory assumption). My question is that has anyone else experienced this situation (limit-load potentially non-conservative)? Is my interpretation of the code correct, that large deformation (non-linear geometry) does not need activated for limit-load analyses?
The material is A-516 Gr 70, so not exotic, but it does have a relatively high UTS/yield ratio which results in higher than usual (in my experience) plastic strain at UTS (ASME VIII Annex 3D for material model setup), which appears to be contributing to the issue.
Any thoughts or pointers appreciated.
I seem to have found an unusual situation (from my experience anyway) whereby Elastic-Plastic results are more onerous than Limit-Load and only slightly better than ASME VIII Div 1 hand calcs. I am using ANSYS and have tried many different solver settings, mesh etc. (and have had discussions within ANSYS with regard to the issues I am experiencing) and am reasonably confident that the ANSYS result is what it is and is likely a reasonably reflection of the physical system.
The issue I am having is that the FEA model fails to converge before utilising the full elastic-plastic material model i.e. the material would appear to have more load capacity that is not being utilised, as it fails to converge at about half the plastic strain of the plastic strain at true UTS (i.e. well within the bounds of the material model). Failure is also due to strains in the plain cylinder rather than e.g. a nozzle, where high strains would normally be expected. The pressure at which non-convergence occurs is lower than the pressure at which a limit load analysis fails to converge.
From running various test cases I believe this is related to large deflection being activated for elastic-plastic cases, which it is not for limit load (small displacement theory assumption). My question is that has anyone else experienced this situation (limit-load potentially non-conservative)? Is my interpretation of the code correct, that large deformation (non-linear geometry) does not need activated for limit-load analyses?
The material is A-516 Gr 70, so not exotic, but it does have a relatively high UTS/yield ratio which results in higher than usual (in my experience) plastic strain at UTS (ASME VIII Annex 3D for material model setup), which appears to be contributing to the issue.
Any thoughts or pointers appreciated.