McT178
Mechanical
- Nov 17, 2010
- 48
Can anyone guide me toward where I can find stress/strain curves for SA516 gr 70 at elevated temperatures? I am working on a non-linear analysis and need these properties. Thanks in advance.
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In short - maybe, but remember, we are ONLY talking about membrane stress, in this context.McT178 said:Is it true that a stress greater than 1.1S that is > sqrt(r*t) from a discontinuity should be considered a Pm?
No. A membrane stress may be classified as local if the extent to which it exceeds 1.1S in the meridional direction is greater than 1.0*sqrt(r*t).McT178 said:Maybe another way to say that is a stress that exceeds 1.1S and is greater than sqrt(r*t) from a discontinuity would exceed the allowable limit.
No - they are governed by the fatigue rules.McT178 said:Are the surface stresses (peaks) governed by 1.5S or 3S?
No. Your membrane stresses will either be classified as general primary membrane (Pm), local primary membrane (Pl), or secondary. The through-thickness bending stresses will either be primary bending (Pb) if it is in a flat head, or secondary. Anything that exceeds the linear through-thickness stress distribution is peak.McT178 said:Is there a distance similar to sqrt(r*t) that defines a hotspot stress? For instance if the stress extends a certain distance it should be considered a local primary, or is this engineering judgement?
My confusion is where a peak (3Sa) becomes a local (1.5Sa). For example, if I have a peak at a discontinuity, at what distance from that discontinuity would I stop evaluating the stress for 3Sa and start to evaluate at 1.5Sa. It seems like it might be a common area of confusion because I found another thread ( where similar questions as my were asked, but it did not seem to result in a definite answer. We commonly receive reports where a point a few inches from a peak are named PL and evaluated as so (1.5Sa). Then the area is evaluated with bending + membrane, and the peaks are evaluated as primary + secondary (3Sa).As far as how far away from discontinuities you should evaluate the stresses, I would suggest that you take the same approach that you would if you had 3D-solid elements: at the edge of the juncture ring. For a typical nozzle-type arrangement, that is usually 1/2t (to account for the thickness not being explicitly accounted for in the shell/plate elements) + fillet weld leg
Is setting the software to membrane only and then setting it to membrane + bending enough differentiate the two? What about peak stresses at discontinuities when the software is set to show only membrane stresses?And don't get to confused about primary vs. secondary. First you have to figure out whether it is membrane or M+B. That seems to be the problem to start...
Yes. That is exactly what you need to do.McT178 said:Is setting the software to membrane only and then setting it to membrane + bending enough differentiate the two?
You won't find "peak" membrane stresses. Don't bother looking.McT178 said:What about peak stresses at discontinuities when the software is set to show only membrane stresses?