DG4
Mechanical
- Mar 22, 2014
- 7
Hi,
I'm a mechanical engineer that designs ASME Section VIII division 1 vessels.
There is a situation at the facility I'm working and I would like to have some advice/opinions on how to address the issue.
The production staff wants to use an existing nozzle on a tank in a way that would cause external loads on it. Nozzle was not designed for those loads in the first place.
WRC and FEA tools in COMPRESS both shows that loads are too high on nozzle. No pad would solve the problem.
I'm now considering adding stiffeners on nozzles. Since this configuration can't be pocessed thru Compress, I'm considering making an elastic analysis as per ASME Section VIII division 2.
Below is my methodology.
Software we usually use is Solidworks Simulation with Pressure Vessel linearization tool.
Model: Nozzle is a double fillet welded as per fig UW-16.1(i). The FEA model represents exactly the assembly, welds, gaps between parts, with no fusion between parts that are not fully penetrated. This model as expected causes increasingly high peak stress in local discontinuity areas.
Fatigue: This is an occasional, non cyclic loading. Fatigue evaluation is excluded(will have to be agreed with my AI).
The point is, since fatigue will not be evaluated, Model will be evaluated only for plastic collapse and local failure. My intention is to check model convergence for membrane stresses and bending and disregard incrasing peak stress at the local discontinuities.
So I would do the following steps in order to check model and results.
1) Make the FEA model.
2) Run a first analysis with a unrefined meshing.
3) Select SCP and linearize through the correctly selected SLCs.
Note the general membrane stress, local membrane stress, and bendings.
4) Refine the mesh, run analysis, note stresses
5) Repeat until verifying convergence (Disregarding local peak stresses)
6) Run final analyses, combine loadings, compare with allowable stresses.
So, I would like to know, is my assumption to disregard peak stresses acceptable if fatigue need not to be evaluated?
Moreover, the software I use only creates tetrahedral elements. Is there a limitation in ASME codes that prevents the use of those elements?