bschroet
Mechanical
- Oct 25, 2006
- 5
I want to measure the pressure inside of a small thin-walled cylindrical pressure vessel with strain gauges. It's a battery can, and during safety tests it heats up, so I want to lay out my Wheatstone bridge circuit such that thermal effects can be canceled. The only way I can think of doing this is to assume Sx=2Sy (hoop stress = 2 x longitudinal stress), and that gets me a relation between the strain in the X and Y directions as a function of E and Poisson's.
Does anyone know if this is standard practice when measuring the stress of a pressure vessel, or would it be advised just to use 1 strain gauge and a theromocouple reading to back out the thermally induced strain?
Does anyone know if this is standard practice when measuring the stress of a pressure vessel, or would it be advised just to use 1 strain gauge and a theromocouple reading to back out the thermally induced strain?