JouHar
Mechanical
- Sep 5, 2024
- 1
Dear Forum. I have tried searching this issue from the forum. Did not find a clear answer/ the issues covered has been a bit different ones.
My question is as follows;
If eg. a 8.8 grade metric M20 bolt is graded to yield value of 640 N/mm2, and when calculated with 80% max stress one can use value of 512 N/mm2. With 245mm2 area for stress in the bolt, the max. stress in the bolt could be 245*512=125kN and torque about 500 Nm. But the 512 N/mm2 is at 20° C. When the flange joint heats up to 300° C, is that torque/ stresss too high for the bolt?
My concern/ question is, that if the mex. yield value at 300° C is for 8.8 roughly 480 N/mm2, and with 80% loading, it would mean max. stress of 245*(480*0,8)=94 kN. With these values I get roughly 375 Nm of torque to be applied.
Q: Shall the bolt in this case, tightened at 20° C, but operated at 300° C (the bolt and flange will heat up the same, no changes in dimensions that could add stressses) be torqued so, that the max. stress is calculated based on the 300° C values and the torque at 20° C would be the 375 Nm..?
My question is as follows;
If eg. a 8.8 grade metric M20 bolt is graded to yield value of 640 N/mm2, and when calculated with 80% max stress one can use value of 512 N/mm2. With 245mm2 area for stress in the bolt, the max. stress in the bolt could be 245*512=125kN and torque about 500 Nm. But the 512 N/mm2 is at 20° C. When the flange joint heats up to 300° C, is that torque/ stresss too high for the bolt?
My concern/ question is, that if the mex. yield value at 300° C is for 8.8 roughly 480 N/mm2, and with 80% loading, it would mean max. stress of 245*(480*0,8)=94 kN. With these values I get roughly 375 Nm of torque to be applied.
Q: Shall the bolt in this case, tightened at 20° C, but operated at 300° C (the bolt and flange will heat up the same, no changes in dimensions that could add stressses) be torqued so, that the max. stress is calculated based on the 300° C values and the torque at 20° C would be the 375 Nm..?