RoNas09
Mechanical
- Dec 17, 2020
- 4
Hi guys,
I'm willing to understand better about a ratcheting assessment analysis of a pressure vessel. I'm assuming that ratcheting assessment is a cyclic analysis, and if there are thermal and/or mechanical transient loads, then the analysis becomes necessarily time-dependent.
After reading the Annex 5.B of ASME VIII Div. 2, I have some doubts about the procedures described in item 5.B.5.2:
1-) STEP 3 says:
So, I understood that in order to find the time points at which peaks and valleys occur, I should use the 6 stress components histograms (not the loading history) and look for all reversal points. These reversal points, then, become relevant to a ratcheting assessment analysis. Is that interpretation correct?
2-) If the above interpretation is correct, then how am I supposed to answer STEP 4 and determine the time point with "the highest peak or lowest valley", considering that I have 6 stress components histograms, and the peaks and valleys of each one of these histograms not necessarily occur at the same time?
3-) There may be a lot of peaks and valleys depending on the number of existing transients, which can turn the post processing of a cyclic analysis impracticable. Is there any design strategy or thumb of rule that reduces the number of points of interest conservatively?
Thanks in advance.
I'm willing to understand better about a ratcheting assessment analysis of a pressure vessel. I'm assuming that ratcheting assessment is a cyclic analysis, and if there are thermal and/or mechanical transient loads, then the analysis becomes necessarily time-dependent.
After reading the Annex 5.B of ASME VIII Div. 2, I have some doubts about the procedures described in item 5.B.5.2:
1-) STEP 3 says:
ASME VIII Div. 2 said:Scan the interior points of each event and delete the time points at which none of the stress components indicate reversals (peaks or valleys).
So, I understood that in order to find the time points at which peaks and valleys occur, I should use the 6 stress components histograms (not the loading history) and look for all reversal points. These reversal points, then, become relevant to a ratcheting assessment analysis. Is that interpretation correct?
2-) If the above interpretation is correct, then how am I supposed to answer STEP 4 and determine the time point with "the highest peak or lowest valley", considering that I have 6 stress components histograms, and the peaks and valleys of each one of these histograms not necessarily occur at the same time?
3-) There may be a lot of peaks and valleys depending on the number of existing transients, which can turn the post processing of a cyclic analysis impracticable. Is there any design strategy or thumb of rule that reduces the number of points of interest conservatively?
Thanks in advance.