Limit Load Solutions
Limit Load Solutions
Limit Load Solutions
ABSTRACT A survey of existing limit loads of structures containing defects is given here. This is of use in performing a two-criterion failure assessment, in evahtating the J or C* parameters by the reference stress approximation, or in evaluating conthmum creep damage using the reference stress. The geometries and loadings considered are (by section number): (2) single-edge notched plates under tension, bending and shear: (3) internal notches in plates under tension, bending and shear; (4) double-edge notched plates under tension, bending and shear; (5) short surface cracks in plates under tension and bending; (6) axisynmwtric notches in round bars under tension and torsion, and chordal cracks in round bars under torsion and bending; (7) general shell structures; (8) surface/penetrating axial defects in cylinders under pressure; (9) surface/ penetrathlg circumferential dejects in cylinders under pressure and bending; (10) penetrating/short surface/axisymmetric surface defects in spheres under pressure: (11) penetrating/surface longitudinal/circumferential defects in pipe bends under pressure or bending; (12) surface defects at cylinder~3'finder intersections under pressure; (13) axisymmetric surface defects at sphere-o'linder intersections under pressure and thrust.
NOMENCLATURE a b c d crack depth ligament thickness constraint factor for 2D cases; crack semi-length for 3D cases staggered crack separation
N/ayt
* Present address: NIl, St Peter's House, Balliol Road, Bootie L20 3LZ, UK. 197 1988 CEGB
198
A. G. Milh'r
r t u x y F Lr M N P Q R S :~ /~
7
notch root radius thickness b/(b + r) a/t in plate; meridional coordinate in cone 1-x force load/limit load for proportional loading plate: bending moment/length; cylinder: moment plate: tensile force/length pressure mode II shear resultant radius of sphere or cylinder mode III shear resultant notch angle (0 for sharp crack, ~/2 for plain bar) semi-angle of circumferential crack in cylinder 2/x/3 = 1"155 fractional ligament thickness in shell (equivalent to y in plate)
o/(RI) 1/2
q
p
ar G G ~b
(G + G)/2 ultimate tensile strength uniaxial yield stress shear stress meridional angle in shell
1 INTRODUCTION
199
200
A. G. Miller
where K: is the appropriate critical stress intensity factor, ~y is the yield stress and a is a characteristic length such as defect size or ligament size. If ligament fracture or m a x i m u m load is used, then the flow stress should be used to normalize the result (see Section 1.5). Alternatively, deformation-based criteria can be used, and in this case the yield stress should be used as normalization. The deformation (or strain) definition given by A S M E 6 is as follows: NB-3213.25 Plastic Analysis-Collapse Load. A plastic analysis may be used to determine the collapse load for a given combination of loads on a given structure. The following criterion for determination of the collapse load shall be used. A load-deflection or load-strain curve is plotted with load as the ordinate and deflection or strain as the abscissa. The angle that the linear part of the load-deflection or load-strain curve makes with the ordinate is called 0. A second straight line, hereafter called the collapse limit line, is drawn through the origin so that it makes an angle q~= t a n - t(2 tan 0) with the ordinate. The collapse load is the load at the intersection of the load-deflection or load-strain curve and the collapse limit line. If this m e t h o d is used, particular care should be given to ensure that the strains or deflections that are used are indicative of the load-carrying capacity of the structure. Depending on the choice of deformation/strain c o m p o n e n t and location, the value of the collapse load will vary. Gerdeen v recommended using the generalized displacement conjugate to the load in order to remove this ambiguity.
201
mentally. A c o m m o n way of calculating a lower bound solution for a shell is to calculate the stresses that would be present if the structure were uncracked and elastic (which is always possible using finite elements) and then to take the elastic value of the stress resultants across the cracked section and use the appropriate limit load expression for a plate in plane stress or strain under combined tension and bending. The Tresca plane stress limit solutions depend only on the plane of the ligament. In perfect plasticity it is permissible to have local discontinuities in the other components of the stress resultants, and hence their elastic values may be ignored. If desired, they may be specifically taken into account by the method in Section 2.12. In plane stress with the Mises yield criterion, or in plane strain with either the Tresca or Mises yield criterion, the stress field caused by the defect extends a distance of order t from the defect. If this is small compared with the characteristic shell distance (Rt) t/2, then the higher plane strain limit solution may be more appropriate than the plane stress limit solution. The Tresca plane stress solution relies on the ligament plane being free to neck down. If it is constrained from doing this, say by shell curvature, then it will be in plane strain. R6 Rev. 3 recommends the plane stress solutions in general. A less conservative estimate is given for short cracks by taking the stresses calculated elastically for the cracked body. This is discussed further in Section 1.8.
where 2 is a variable andpio is constant in any particular case. There will be a unique value of 2 = 2 o at which equilibrated plastic flow takes place. There will be such a value 2 corresponding to every set of ratios pi o. Hence 2o,pi o defines a yield point loading surface in the multi-dimensional load space. The convexity lemma states that this yield point loading surface is convex, as a consequence of the convexity of the yield surface. Hence the planes through the intersections of the yield point loading surface with the axes form an inscribed surface, and a lower bound to the limit load is given by the criterion
Piy
202
A. G. Miller
where Ply are the limit loads under a single type of load. The displacement boundary conditions must be the same in each case. For example, results are given here for the limit loads of plates under combined tension and bending. However, if the limiting values of the stress resultants under pure tension (and zero moment) and pure bending (and zero tension) are given by INI ~< No and IM[ ~< Mo
respectively, then a lower bound to the limit load under combined tension and bending is given by INI + [MJ N--~ M o <~1
kt-at 4 a c
where k is a material constant between 0.4 and 1-5 for the mild steels considered. If e is greater than the material strain at the flow stress, then the cut-offat L maxis described by the structure limit load. Ire is less, then the cutoffshould be taken at a load based on a reduced flow stress. Ire is less than the yield strain, then the local collapse load should be used with the flow stress.
203
2h
.[
Ewing ' considered an eccentric defect in mode III (Fig. 2) and constructed the failure assessment line using a critical crack tip opening displacement criterion. He concluded that this agreed well with the R6 diagram using the global collapse load, although there was a small dip inside the diagram at the local collapse load. Bradford tt derived a simplified plastic line spring model to calculate J for surface defects. Only one numerical example is given, and in this the global collapse load gives a better reference stress than does the local collapse load. Miller t2 reviewed published calculations of J at surface defects for plates in tension, cylinders with circumferential defects in tension and cylinders with axial defects under pressure. In all cases the global collapse load gave better reference stress J estimates than did the local collapse load but the number of results was small. R6 recommends the use of the local collapse load, as it is conservative. There are a large number of test results for L~ ax which show that this conservatism may be relaxed at ductile instability, but the evidence in the elasto-plastic r~gime is still limited. This issue may be resolved by performing a J-integral calculation (as in R6 Rev. 3). The ligament behaviour should be controlled by J. If this is estimated by the reference stress method, the appropriate limit load to use remains to be resolved.
1.9 Defect characterization
The existing codes, which give rules for defect characterization (Refs 13, 14 and R6), give rules which are based on LEFM. At present there is little
204
A. G. Miller
information about how defects should be characterized for the purpose of assessing plastic collapse. However, it can be stated that if the defect size is increased, the plastic collapse load cannot be increased, so circumscribing a defect with a bigger effective defect is always conservative. Miller t5 considered ductile failure test results for a variety of multiple defect geometries and concluded that the code characterization was always conservative. For purely ductile failure, net section area was a valid method to use, and thin or multiple ligaments did not need any special treatment except for that described in Section 1.8. The limit solutions available in the literature for notched plates consider the geometries with a finite root radius, or a V-shaped notch with any given flank angle. The stress intensity factor is only relevant for sharp, parallelsided notches, and in practice defects are characterized for assessment purposes as being of this form.
max {]0.2 - 0.3], ]0.3 - atl, 10.1- 0._,1}= % (0.~ + 0. 5 ...[_0.2) __ (0.20.3 + 0"30"1 -'{'-0"10.2) m 0.:,, 0"~j stress components ay uniaxial yield stress
2
or (0.~1+ a~z + a~3) -{022033 + 0.330"11 "~-0.110"22) + 3(0.-~3+ air + 0.~2) = Cry 0.~ principal stresses
It can be shown that the difference in limit load given by these yield surfaces is 0"866L~t" = 2 L~I, <~ Lr~< L,~I. ~ < 5 5 L T = l ' 1 5 5 L T where L r and Lxl are the Tresca and Mises limit load respectively. In practice this difference is small compared to other factors, and the choice is usually made on grounds o f convenience.
N/3 3
205
/
//
PLone stroin
Plane
stress
I:
/,/"
, 2 " f#
t /
IJ/,," "
and consequently Je~ - 02] is constant. It equals ay for Tresca and 1"155cr, for Mises. The yield surface is thus two parallel lines as in Fig. 3. As the plane strain yield surface circumscribes the plane stress yield surface for both Tresca and Mises, the plane strain limit load is always higher. Moreover, as the Mises plane strain surface may be obtained by scaling the Tresca plane strain surface by a factor of 2/x/3, the limit loads are in the same ratio. This increase in limit load is described by the constraint factor c: L Tresca plane strain c=
LTo
c= c=
,/3L
2LT~
/-'To
where L is the appropriate limit load and LT~,is the Tresca plane stress limit load. Hence the two plane strain constraint factors are the same but the plane strain Mises limit load is 1-155 times the plane strain Tresca load. It can be seen from Fig. 3 that 1 ~< c ~ 1.155 Mises plane stress whereas in plane strain the constraint factor is unbounded. The constraint factor may also be regarded in tensile cases without bending as the ratio of the average stress to the yield stress (or 1-155ay for plane strain Mises).
206
1.12 Yield criteria for shells
A. G. Miller
Shell calculations are done using the tensile and bending stress resultants rather than stresses. As the relationship between the yield criteria for stress resultants and those for stresses are complicated, simplified yield criteria are commonly used for shell stress resultants. The shell is in a state of plane stress, and the commonest criterion is the two-moment limited interaction yield surface shown in Fig. 4. Hodge 8 shows that 0"618LL ~<LT ~<LL 0"618Lt. ~< L,4 ~< I'155LL
t L =
where L:4 = Mises limit load, LT = Tresca limit load and limited interaction limit load.
two-moment
-1 I
m2 1 i
!
Fig. 4. Two-momentlimited interaction yield surface for shells. However, as the bending and stretching are rarely significant simultaneously, the approximation is often better than implied by the inequalities. However, the limits may be achieved in simple loading cases when both bending and stretching are important. The origin of this factor 0"618 may be illustrated by considering the case of a plain beam. The results in Section 2.4.1 show that for Tresca plane stress ( ~ r t ) 2 + 4a-~-2=1 When
N
4M
~yl~Gyl 2
this gives N 4M x/5_- 1_0.618 ay--~=cryt2 = 2
207
If this yield surface is used without the 0"618 factor being applied, the absence of simultaneous bending and stretching should always be checked for. The collapse of a shell under boss loading (point force) provides a counter example in which bending and stretching arise simultaneously (in the h o o p direction). This is shown by Ewing's results discussed in Section 13.2. For thin shells in a m e m b r a n e stress state the Mises and Tresca yield criteria give the same result for equibiaxial stresses, as in a pressurized sphere: P = 2ayt both Tresca and Mises R When the two principal stresses are not equal, Mises gives a higher limit load, the difference being at its m a x i m u m when the stress components are in a ratio of 2:1, as in a closed pressurized cylinder: P = tryt R Tresca P = ~2tryt Mises
If the two principal stresses are of opposite sign, then the Mises/Tresca ratio reaches 2/,,/3 at (1, - 1,0) and is between 1 and 1-155 for other values.
2 S I N G L E - E D G E N O T C H E D PLATES These have been extensively studied. Most work has been done on the plane stress and plane strain cases rather than finite crack lengths. This is of more relevance to test specimen geometries than to structures. The plane strain case can be analysed by slip-line field theory which gives an upper b o u n d when the solution is not complete. 'Complete' means that a statically admissible stress field has been extended into the rigid regions adjacent to the plastic regions. Sharp cracks are considered first. A review of limit loads for these is given by Haigh and Richards, ~6 and a review of test results is given by Willoughby} 7 The effect of notch root radius and flank angle is also considered. These can only reduce the limit load, as material is being removed compared to the sharp crack geometry. For elastic material with a .V notch, the power of the stress singularity alters, and with a rounded root the stress singularity becomes a finite stress concentration. Hence in neither case is the conventional stress intensity
208
A. G. Miller
factor, strictly speaking, a valid parameter. In practice defects are usually assessed pessimistically assuming them to be sharp: a b r t
u x
M N Q S
ay
~t
moment/width force/width mode II shear force/width mode III shear force/width yield stress notch angle
1-x
IM M':M+I/2 Na
a
i t
a
y:_l - a~- : I - ~
~. ligament
I
plate I
I I
i I
---N ~ -X
Q S
Fig. 5.
SEN geometry.
209
0 ~< X ~< 1
x > 0.154
4M(0)
x--*0
0~<x~<l
n ~ 1 - 2x y2
n ....~ _ _
x~0 y-,0
c:
%
Z,N
(t-al 2
( Tresco
1.3
1.2
1.1
1.0
.1
.2
.3 o / t
Fig. 6.
TABLE ! Limit Moment Plane Strain for Single-edge Notched Plate (from Ewing 21)
a/t = x c
a/t = x
(Mises)
211
This is the same as in the plain b e a m result f o r c o m b i n e d tension a n d bending, with the m o m e n t given by the eccentric tensile force o n the ligament:
Na 2
..,
N_N_=n(x)=[-[
Lt-.+--r-)
"
)'-- 1'~ 2
+7(1
_ x ) Z ] l/z
- t?x--~--)
2 -- 7x--
7--1'~
x >0"146
--7(l+y)x+v(l+v)x
for y - ~ O
7y 2 n~ 1 +7=0.536y2
2 7 - - - ~ r ~ = 1.155
= n(x) = 1 -- x -- x 2
O'yl
o'yt
-- n(x)
x < 0.545
n(x) ~ f ( x ) + 22x3(0.545 - x) 2
n ----~ 1 - - x
x~0
212
A. G. Miller
The pin-loaded limit forces are shown graphically in Fig. 7. This also shows the results of plane stress tests on mild steel specimens by Ewing and Richards.22"23 2.2.4 Plane strain Mises This is 1"155 times the Tresca plane strain result. 2.2.5 K u m a r et aL 25 give values for the limit loads which are the Tresca plane stress results renormalized to give the correct result as x ---, 1. They are not the correct limit load and are not recommended for use. The variation of their h(n,x) functions with n would be reduced if they were normalized with respect to the correct limit load as a function of x. (If reference stress theory were exact, the variation would vanish.)
~yt
For Tresca plane stress this result may be derived by putting M = -Na into the expressions given in Section 2.4. The negative moment, shallow crack combined bending and tension solution is not available for the other cases, however. This is compared with the pin-loading results in Fig. 7.
Z0
i
1.0 ',~ 0.8 N O'yt 06 0/* 0.2 0
I l I L, I l l F ~
---Io
I.
It
U--19- o l
~"~,C,,._ \ \e~'"
~'~
~"
~,F
Ist~ess/
)
~',,~ "% ~ .
_F_
0.1
0.2
03
0.~,
O.S
alt
06
0.7
08
0.9
"~"'~I I0
Fig. 7, The theoretical and experimental variation of yield load with notch length for single. ~ edge notched (SEN) specimens (from Ewing and Richards ....~3 ).
213
( t -- a) N 3'~ - 2 M + N t
(for M = 0, y, = 3')
),2 n(y~) N n(.v) = --tryt
(2M + Nt)q(y~)
Lr = crr(t -- a) z q(Y~)
where n is the appropriate function (Tresca or Mises plane stress or plane strain) taken from Section 2.2 for the pin-loaded case and ),e is the effective fractional ligament thickness as defined above. It follows from this that in all cases the results in Section 2.1 obey 4M 'rt 2
*
2nO')
as ) , ~ 0
That is, the tensile force for very deep cracks is governed by the m o m e n t due to the eccentricity of the ligament. These results may be rewritten in terms of the m o m e n t referred to the centre-line of the ligament:
M' = M + Na/2 L~
LGr(t _ a) 2
a,(t- a) q(Y~)
This shows that only the stresses referred to the ligament affect the limit load. The thickness t has no effect, provided that the crack is sufficiently deep. The criterion for sufficient depth will now depend on the ratio N / M , and this must be considered separately for each case. For Tresca plane stress the deep crack solution is always valid. For Mises plane stress the shallow crack solution is unknown. For Tresca or Mises plane strain the shallow crack solution is discussed in Section 2.4.5.
214
A. G. M i l l e r
N2(t
a) 2] t2 0< x < 1
+ - ? - =1
As the square root m a y have either sign, and plastic collapse m a y occur in either tension or compression, the expression for L r m a y be rewritten
I2M + Na[ + E(2M + Na) " + NZ(t - a) z] 1/2
t r=
a~(t -- a) z
The a n a l o g o u s results apply. The deep crack validity limits are given by O k a m u r a et al. 19 x> xo =
O.1540{l+N/[ay(t-a)]} 1 + O'1540{N/[ay(t - a)]}
if
N if - -
o'y(t - a)
cry (t -o )z
1.2-
" - ~"~."~=~'~
" \\\V.
\\N~g.. ~N~.
o/t ol t
= 0 22 = 0.1
%
V I I I 1 I I 1 I 1
-lO
-0.5
1 t I 0.5
i I~
I 1.0
M= = M q.1/2No
Fig.
8.
Limit moment and force for SEN plate (from Okamura et al. 1 9 ). Plane stress Mises.
215
This depth limit agrees with the value OfXo = 0-154 for pure bending given in Section 2.1.2 at the validity limit: x=0-146 N ~ = 0-832 ayt N - = 0.974 > 0.5476 ar( t -- a)
This therefore satisfies x 0 = 0.146 < 0-220 and is consistent with the above. O k a m u r a derived lower bounds for shallow cracks. These are shown in Fig. 8.
2.4.3 Plane stra& T r e s c a 24 The analogous results may be rewritten for deep cracks (where 'deep' will be defined later) in terms of x = a/t:
~deep' cracks (in terms of Ye), i.e. bending-dominated q(ye) = 0.794 - .re + [-(0.794 - 3,)2 + 0.588y2] 1/2 "shallow' cracks (in terms of yo), i.e. tension-dominated
q(y~) ~< y~ -- (re + 0"232)(1
y, < 0"455
v~ > 0"455
-- ye) 2 "
q(Y~) >
These expressions are shown in Fig. 9. The crack depth limit is given by x>0-4 N
l
6M
12
x>0
M=0
x>0-295
N=0
The transitional value of 0"4 is the m a x i m u m for all values o f M / N t (i.e. the deep crack solution is valid for all M / N t if x > 0.4). Ewing's expressions were developed for the positive tension, positive bending quadrant. The solution for all sign combinations is shown in Fig. 10 for deep cracks. An alternative representation of the bending-dominated r6gime is given by Shiratori and Miyoshi: 29 m " = 1-26 + 0.521 n" - 0-739(n") 2 where
4M' N
a) 2 a,(l a)
a,(t
1.6
1.4
06
Lower bound to q
Fig. 9.
02 0t. 06 08 y: (t-o)/ (t.2MIN) Limit moment and force for SEN plate (from EwingZ'~). Plane strain. ..... ..... Rice's upper bound S h i r o t o r i a n d Dodd field Rice opproximote expression
,.,
1.0 O.S
/
m " -=
4 M'
0.6
/ ,,/ / /
O.Z. O.Z
'\.~
Fig. i0.
-"
Combined bending and tension for deep-cracked SEN plate in plane strain (from Nicholson and Paris~S).
217
SEN Plane Strain Upper Bound for Shallow Cracks (from Ewing 24) N Values of ~ (Tresca) or - (Mises) o'yt 1-155oyt
6M/Nt a/t 0.5 1 2 4 8
2.4.4 P l a n e s t r a i n M i s e s
T h e results are no longer expressible in terms o f a single f u n c t i o n q(Ye) only, as for d e e p cracks. Physically the r e a s o n is that plastic yielding can spread to the top free surfaces on either side o f the notch. Ewing derived an u p p e r b o u n d solution f r o m the shallow c r a c k b e n d i n g solution. His results are given in Tables 2 and 3. T a b l e 2 gives an u p p e r b o u n d limit load for the region w h e r e the shallow crack solution is a p p r o p r i a t e . T a b l e 3 c o m p a r e s these results with the p u r e b e n d i n g results for shallow cracks given above, and the values t a k e n f r o m TABLE 3 SEN Plane Strain Upper Bound for Shallow Cracks Values of 4M (Tresca) or ~yt2
a/t a b a/t a
O"10
0'89
0"92
0"20
0"75
0-79
0.30
0-58
0-62
a Taken from Table 2 with 6M/Nt = 8. b Taken from Table I with 6M/Nt = zc.
218
A. G. Miller
Table 2 are slightly lower than the values taken from Table 1, as they should be.
R6 Rev. 2, eqn A2.4.5, gives an empirically modified version of the Tresca plane stress result: Lr = II'5M + Nal + [-(l'5M + Na) 2 + N2(t o'y(t - - a ) 2
-
a ) 2 ] 1/2
This expression is no longer recommended. It is 6% non-conservative under pure bending compared to Tresca plane strain but conservative under combined tension/bending.
2.5.2
The classical plate formulae are pessimistic because they assume that the ends are free. An approximation sometimes made, 3t'32 or in O R A C L E by Parsons, 33 is to ignore the contribution to the bending moment produced by the eccentricity of the tensile force: Met f = M -- Na This cannot be rigorously justified, and it should be confirmed that redistributing the moment Na does not cause another part of the structure to be in a more onerous condition than the ligament. This version is used by O R A C L E for both the Tresca plane stress formula and with the R6 Rev. 2 modification of this. BS PD6493 uses the Tresca plane stress version of this approximation.
2.5.3
Chel132 gives an approximate solution for plane strain which is equivalent to the solution here for deep cracks, and is based on a conservative approximation to the pin-loading SENT results when a/t < 0"545.
~.os
a
"-
I .Or,
~
, 80 , 70
219
Upper Lower
bound bound
, A 60 5 0
/,lO 3
/ 0
i 20
~ 10
I 0
Fig. 11.
SENB with V-notch: plane stress Mises (from Ford and Lianists).
(exact) :~ in r a d i a n s ~ in r a d i a n s
F o r :~> 67 b o t h l o w e r a n d u p p e r b o u n d s are given, a n d t h e y are b o t h r e p r e s e n t e d b y the a b o v e f o r m u l a e to w i t h i n 0"5%. T h i s is c o n t i n u o u s with the d e e p s h a r p n o t c h result f o r ~ = 0 (c = 1.072) a n d the u n n o t c h e d b a r f o r ~ = re/2 (c = 1). T h e d e p t h v a l i d i t y limits are n o t k n o w n , e x c e p t f o r :~ = 0 a n d ~ = ~/2. T h e results are s h o w n in Fig. 11.
220
I.I.
A. G. Miller
~1,3 u O C
e, o 1.1
9O Fig. 12.
;o 4
:t in r a d i a n s ~ in r a d i a n s
1 -x
> l -~
2 + ~z/2 -
T h i s is slightly m o r e stringent t h a n G r e e n ' s d e p t h r e q u i r e m e n t s . T h e s h a l l o w c r a c k s o l u t i o n is not k n o w n . T h e s o l u t i o n here is c o n t i n u o u s with the d e e p c r a c k s o l u t i o n at :~ = 0 (c = 1.2606) a n d with the u n n o t c h e d b a r s o l u t i o n at :t = re/2 ( c = 1). T h e results are s h o w n in Fig. 12. Dietrich a n d Szczepinski 35 give the c o m p l e t e slipline field for :t = 60: a n d their c o n s t r a i n t f a c t o r is the s a m e as a b o v e .
O.y12 ( 1 -- .V) 2
= 1
ahvays
b+r
C =
221
Fig. 13.
/ I .I I I I I I 1.10 0.1 0 . 2 0 3 0/, 0 5 0 . 6 0 . 7 0 . 8 0 9 b b+r S E N B with circular root: plane stress Mises (from Ford a n d LianistS).
U 1.00
For deep notches 0 < u < 0"692 0.692 < u < 1 c = 1 + 0"045u 2
c = 1.072 0"123r
Both lower and upper bounds are given, and are represented by these formulae to the stated accuracy. This merges continuously with the deep sharp notch solution at r = 0 (u = l, c = 1"072) and the unnotched bar solution at r = ~ (u = 0). The depth limits are not known, except for u - - 0 and u = 1. The results are shown in Fig. 13.
c-ayt2(1-x)2
Deep cracks
0<u<0"64
0.64<u<1
c=1+0"155u
c=0.811+0.450u
to 1.5% to 1"5%
Both expressions are representations of upper bounds to the stated accuracy. They merge continuously with the deep sharp crack solution at
TABLE 4 Pure Bending in Plane Strain
r/b
0 _1_ 32 16
Critical
Constraint factor c
1-261 1.243 1-227
222
1.4 i i
A. G. Miller
i i i l i
1.3
Z,
u
o 1.2
cO o~ tO U 1.1
Fig. 14.
r = 0 (c = 1.261) and the unnotched bar solution at r = oc. The depth validity limits are not known, except for u = 0 and u = 1. The results are shown in Fig. 14. Ewing 34 studied the effect of g > 0 simultaneously with r > 0. For any given rib the solution is independent of ~, provided that ~ is less than some critical angle which depends on rib. The values of this critical angle and the corresponding constraint factors are shown in Table 4.
2.7.4 Plane strain Mises This gives a limit load 1.155 times the Tresca plane strain limit load. 2.8 Tension: effect of notch root radius and notch angle for fixed grip loading
Notch root radius and flank angle have no effect. The constraint factor is always unity.
2.9 Combined tension and bending: effect of notch root radius and notch angle
Complete solutions for this are not available. For deep cracks lower and upper bounds (sometimes widely different) are given for: (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) large small large small angle wedges by Shiratori and Dodd; 27 angle wedges by Shiratori and D odd; 36 radius circular notches by Dodd and Shiratori; 3~ radius circular notches by Shiratori and Dodd. 38
223
IF
45" total
notch
angle.
0 . 2 5 m m . root
radius.
(a)
(b)
I I
[~
t mm
2ram
I
8ram
I
2b[ rrrn
/\
(c)
Fig. 15. Three-point bend geometry. (al and (b) Charpy test geometries considered by Green and Hundy; 4 (c) Charpy and lzod geometries considered by Ewing. 3"~
2.10 Three-point bending (Charpy test) In three-point bending, there is a non-zero (discontinuous) shear force at the minimum section, which alters the limit moment from the pure bending value, with zero shear. Pure bending is obtained in a four-point bending test. The Charpy test is a three-point bending geometry. Only plane strain Tresca is considered here. (Plane strain Mises will give 1.155 times the Tresca limit load.)
2.10.1 Green and Hundry 4 considered the two Charpy test geometries shown in Figs 15(a) and (b), and showed that 4M ayt2 = 1-21(1 - x ) 2 x>0-18
The reduction in the critical depth due to the presence of shear is similar to that described in the more general treatment ofcombined bending and shear given in Section 2.13.
224
A. G. Miller
TABLE 5 Three-point Bending Constraint Factors in Plane Strain r 0 l 22 b 0 0-5 1"0 0 0"5 1-0 c 1"224 1"251 1-287 1"216 t'243 1"279 r 0-25 1 22 b 0 0-5 1"0 0 0'5 1"0 c 1'218 1"245 1"281 1'210 l'238 1"274
20
20
4M c = - - - - - - -a) a,(t ~
(Tresca)
4M 1"155~rr(t a) 2 (Mises) -
Haigh
a n d R i c h a r d s 16 q u o t e 4M O.yt2 =
1"22(1 - X) 2
X > 0"18
2.10.3 Ewing 34 considered the geometry shown in Fig. 15(c) and calculated the effect of notch root radius r and indenter radius b (approximating the indenter by a flat punch). The results are shown in Table 5, with
4M ayt" = c(1 -
x) 2
For zero indenter width this agrees with the above results.
2.10.4 K u m a r et al. 25 give the result as the pure bending solution, with no allowance for shear. Similarly, they give the Mises plane stress solution as being the pure bending solution. Therefore these results are not recommended.
TABLE 6 Three-point Bending Constraint Factors in Plane Strain for Shallow Cracks
a/t c a/t c a/t c
0 0"03 0"05
0"08 0"10
1'190 1'199
225
1-3
o 1'2
/"////
/
1-I
/ / / /
10 I 0'06 a/t I 0-12 I 0'18
, three-point bend.
2.10.5
The shallow crack solution (a/t < 0"18) is given by Matsoukas et al. 41 The constraint factor c is given in Table 6 and compared with the four-point bend result in Fig. 16. The span is given by l = 2t (see Fig. 15). In the smooth bar limit, a / t - , O , the constraint factor c tends to the value of 1"12, in agreement with Green. 4z
where n(x) - N / % t .
226
CT5
A. G. Miller
1
I
!t ,
SEN
O SEN-----
I Lood
Line
n ---~y2/4
2.11.4 Plane strain Mises This is 1"155 times the plane strain Tresca limit load. 2.11.5 K u m a r et al. 25 give values for the limit loads which, as in the p i n - l o a d e d S E N T case ( S e c t i o n 2.2.5), are the T r e s c a p l a n e stress f o r m u l a e ,
227
0.6
0.2
0.1
Ol
0.2
0./,
X
0.6
0.8
1.0
M N ah Q b
moment tensile force out-of-plane stress (uniform across section) mode II shear force ligament thickness ( t - a ) for SEN (or ( t - 2 a ) for DEN)
The geometry is shown in Fig. 19. The result is useful in cases where the elastic stresses are available, and it avoids having to choose between the plane stress and plane strain solution:
+-7
228
A. G. Miller
Surfacedefect
/1Lo
Fig. 19.
These expressions are based on a "nominal' Mises yield criterion, and do not satisfy the boundary conditions at the back surface when Q #- 0. They are a valid lower bound for double-edge notched plates, or with additional support at the back surface.
2.12.2
Ewing (pers. comm.) gives a modification of Section 2.12.1 to allow for back surface interaction with shear present:
0"=4 +(P-+L
N I = ( N 2+Q2),
+2_Q
~,/3
The plane strain case (as opposed to specified out-of-plane stresses) is considered in Section 2.13.
2.13.1
Ewing (pers. comm.) has derived an approximate solution for deep cracks in plane strain under combined tension, bending and shear. When shear is absent, the deep crack solution is valid when a/t > 0.4, but the validity limit is not known in general. It is assumed that the tensile force acts along the centre-line of the ligament. If it acts along the centre-line of the plate, an extra bending moment of Na must be included. The solution is given in Table 7 and Fig. 20 for the Tresca yield criterion. In the Mises case the limit load should be multiplied by 1.155. An alternative (lower bound) solution is given in Section 2.12.
229
(a) Table o f F expressed in terms o f m' and n' 0"0 O. 1 t)'2 0"3 0"4 0"5 0"6 0"7 0"8 0"9 I'0
0"0 0"10 0"20 0"30 0"40 0-50 0"60 0"70 0-80 0'90 I '00
1.000 1.006 1"022 1.044 1.067 1"088 1"106 1"117 1-119 1"103 1.000
1"005 1-029 1-052 1"076 1"099 1"119 1'133 1'140 1"136 1"112
1'019 1"060 1"086 1-109 1"130 1"147 1"157 1"158 1'146 1"109
1"040 1"094 1'119 1'141 1"159 1"170 1-175 1-168 1"145 1"085
1"067 1-127 1-150 1"169 1'!82 1'188 1"185 1-168 1"127 1-018
1"!54 1"144 1"000 1"192 1"164 1"!96 1'156 1'188 1'127 1.164 1"049 1"109 0-892
(b) Table o f F expressed in terms o f re' and q' 0"0 0"1 0.2 0"3 0"4 0"5 0"6 0"7 0"8 0"9 1"0
0"0 0"10 0-20 0-30 0-40 0-50 0"60 0"70 0"80 0-90 1'00
1"000 0"997 0-987 0'971 0-949 0-922 0-892 0"868 0"874 0"925 I '000
1-046 1"047 1'040 1'027 t'009 0"986 0"962 0-943 0-944 0"978
1-085 1"090 1"087 1"077 1'063 1"044 1-024 1-009 1"008 1'031
1"116 1"128 1'127 1'120 1-109 1'094 1'079 1'066 1"065 1"031
1'138 1"158 1"160 1-156 1'148 1"137 1"124 1-114 1"I10 1'079
1"151 1-180 1"185 1'184 1"179 1"170 1"159 1.149 1"141 1-141
The notation is as follows: t = plate thickness; a = c r a c k depth (a/t>~ 0-4); m = bending moment parameter = M/I'26M' for M' = a y ( t - a)-'/4; n = tension parameter = N/'N' for N' = a,(t - a); q = shear parameter = Q/Q' for Q' = ay(t - a)/2; m' = m/r, n' = n/r, q' = q/r for r = (nil + n 2 + q2)t/2; Lr = rF(m', n', q').
230
1 i ,
A. G. Miller
, = i , !
q=O
0.2
=E
.= o.s
IE
l0
0.6
,
0
,"..
,'x.,
0.5 n = NIN e
Fig. 20. Plastic yield loci for fixed values of the mode |l shear parameter, q = Q/Q'. Here M, N and Q denote moment, tension and shear in a combination ensuring collapse. M ' = a) /4, N' = ay(t-- a), Q' = ~ y ( t - a)/2.
(Q mode II shear resultant) This is believed to be accurate to 2%, and can lie 17% inside the nominal criterion: + =1
The yield surfaces are shown in Fig. 21. The depth validity limits are unknown, except for Q = O. The Mises limit load is 15% higher.
2.13.3
In the special case of zero tension, Ewing and Swingler43 have calculated both lower and upper bounds. The lower bound is within 5% of the nominal criterion: + =1 QI =" f l y ( / - - a)/2
Mt =
O'y(/--
a)2/4 (Tresca)
The upper bound is given in Table 8 and Fig. 22, along with the minimum
-1
~
-1
QIQ 1
NO~lna[ x 0.83
Fig. 21.
TABLE 8 Combined Bending and Mode II Shear (from Ewing and Swingler 43)
Q/Q=
0.000 0.050 0.100 0.150 0-200 0.250 0-300 0"350 0.400 0.450 0-500 0.550 0.600 0.650 0.700 0.750 0.800 0-850 0-900 0.950
1-000
0-189
These results apply to a notch at a cantilevered end. For Q/Qt >0'8, the results are an upper bound only and cannot be exact.
232
A. G. Miller
M/M
I
Nominc]| L o w e r B o u n d (M2/M2~.Q2/Q2=1)
Lower
Bound
8/w 2
0"6
O.t,.
\
0"2
I 02
I or, Q/Q1
I I 06
2/.
I o-8
~l
1
Fig. 22.
crack depth. The upper bound is potentially exact for Q/Q ~ > 0-803 (i.e. the slipline field is statically admissible, but it has not been constructed in full). When Q = 0, the solution coincides with that given in Section 2.1.3. If the notch is at a cantilever position, then the limit moment is higher, and is also shown in Table 8. The depth validity limits for these results have not been calculated. The Mises load is a factor of 1"155 greater.
2.13.4
A c o m m o n approximate solution for combined tension, bending and mode II shear is to generalize Section 2.4.1 to include shear in a Tresca yield criterion: ~
= b2 +~ b2 +L\ b~ ) + 7
Lr=--~y
This is similar to Section 2.12.1 with a h = 0, Tresca shear instead of Mises shear, and an amelioration allowed for the effect o f the crack on the collapse
233
moment. As in Section 2.12.2, there is no free surface shear correction. When compared with Section 2.13.1 over the region N > 0, M > 0, Q > 0: 0-79 < Lr(2.13.1) < 1-17 Lr(2.13.4)
Hence the approximation is conservative (ignoring a 2% error) if a Mises yield criterion is assumed.
(;:7
N<S N>S
= 1
N 1 = a , ( t - a),
S l = a,(t - a)/2
1S'~ z
=0
~ N/N1 0-5
~\\~ \\
\ \\
Bound
0'5
s/s,
Fig. 23. Combined tension and mode III shear (from Ewing and Swingler'~)).
234
A. G. Miller
t
",
Line of sidegrooves
Fig.24.
2.15.1
Unsidegrooved plane strain Tresca, pin-loading:
F= Btayn(a/t)
where B is thickness in transverse direction, Fis end load, and n(a/t) is shown in Fig. 25 for c= 15 and ~ = 30 . The solution for deep cracks is exact; the solution for shallow cracks is an upper bound.
2.15.2
Unsidegrooved plane strain Mises, pin-loading:
F= l'155Btayn(a/t)
% % i i i I i i i i
0.9
0.5 0.7
0.6
b;"
~n 0..5
~=15,
~,
0,2 0.1
I I I I I
~
I I I
0,I
0,2
0,3
0./. alt
0.5
0.6
02
0,8
0.9
Fig. 25. Collapse loads for ungrooved single-edge inclined notch specimens (from
Ewing~5).
235
2.15.3 Sidegrooved plane strain Tresca, fixed grip loading (load applied through the centre of the ligament): ~a,B!t -- a) F = min [ayB (t - a) cosec 2ct
3 INTERNAL NOTCHES IN PLATES Mainly solutions for through-thickness or extended defects are considered here. No solutions for embedded elliptical defects are known, except for the limited results given in Section 3.4. 3.1 Centre-cracked plate in tension
t
a e
h N
plate width of thickness crack width or depth crack eccentricity (see Fig. 26) plate length force/width or thickness
Crock
Fig. 26.
236
A. G. Miller
TABLE 9 Centre-cracked Plate in Tension (values given in units of a/'~,) (plane stress Mises)
a't 0.2 0.4 h/t 0.6 >.0.71
N=ay(t-a)
(Ref. 16)
This is c o m p a r e d with experimental results in Fig. 27, taken from Willoughby.17 This result is not valid for short plates (h << t). H o d g e ~6 d e m o n s t r a t e d that it was exact for square plates (h = t). A i n s w o r t h (pets. comm.) derived an a p p r o x i m a t e lower b o u n d solution for the case of a uniform applied stress. This agreed with the above solution when h 2 > _ . 2 a ( t - a ) . This is always satisfied if h/t > l / x / 2 = 0"707. The results for short plates from Ainsworth's lower b o u n d m e t h o d are s h o w n in Table 9 for plane stress and Mises yield criterion.
3.1.2 Plane strain M i s e s This is 1'155 times the plane strain Tresca result.
A lower b o u n d solution which reduces to the Tresca plane stress result is, for
M - ae M (t 2 - a z - 4e 2) 8et
(a) or(b)
Nt >~t(t-a~ M - ae Nt <<'t(t-a~
and and
~/>
M
N-t~<
(t 2 - a 2 - 4e 2) 8et
Lr =
237
1.2
1.0
, , , .
N 0.8~ N ~ !!el
0.6 0..
0.2
Fig. 2"/. Centre-cracked panels in tension (from Willoughby I ~). All data from Table 9. , A533B steel; /~, 316 stainless steel plate; A, 316 stainless steel weld; (3, low alloy steel.
Alternatively, for M (a) - ae M N-t ~< M ~/> (t 2 - (t 2 - a 2 - 4e 2) 8et
a 2 --
4 e 2)
or (b)
8et
aN~21 + [ ( M -
The geometry is shown in Fig. 26. The eccentricity e is assumed to be positive. A positive bending m o m e n t , M, is one which tends to produce tension at the surface closer to the crack. The positive square root sign is taken. The choice o f f o r m u l a depends on which ligament the neutral axis is in.
238
A. G. Miller
zt~
o
i
d
i
c~
0
c~
I
zi;~
/ /$oi~
.=
~'
c~
o
I
o
i
c~
i
o
i
-M
c~
o
i
o
i
d
i
o
!
239
For e = 0 and M = 0, the solution reduces to the centre-cracked plate in tension given in Section 3.1.1. As e---, 1/2(t- a) the range of validity of the second solution shrinks to zero. In the limit the first solution agrees with the single-edge notched plate solution in Section 2.4.1.
3.2.2
BS PD6493 gives local collapse loads for embedded defects. These are based on elastic-plastic finite-element calculations, with a criterion of 1% strain in the thinnest ligament (here defined as b). Hence the b/t = 0 result does not agree with the surface defect results, as described in Section 2.4. The results are shown in Fig. 28. The geometry is shown in Fig. 26.
3.2.3
R6 Rev. 2 Appendix 247 recommends that an embedded defect should be treated as two separate surface defects, by bisecting the defect, and assessing each ligament separately. No recommendation on load sharing is given. This method is very conservative, as it ignores the resistance to rotation offered by the other ligament, and does not allow any load shedding on to the other ligament. As the defect approaches the surface, the limit load does not change continuously into the single-edge notched limit load but goes to zero. For the centre-cracked plate under tension, the R6 Rev. 2 proposal is compared with the true limit load and some experimental results in Fig. 27. This issue of ligament failure is similar to that in Section 1.8. Once one ligament has failed, the defect should be recharacterized and re-assessed.
b I Ih = 1.5 t.0
"t/'%
o.s
ILE
I 0.$
j l.O
240
A. G. Miller
I I
I I I
I I
I I I I I I
I I I I I I
j
i
1
I t I tt
I
t I t t
Fig. 30.
0.5-
11500
" ~
0.25
0.5
olt
It
_11
2c Fig. 31. Local collapse load for central embedded elliptical defect in plate in tension.
241
Ewing ~ has considered an eccentric defect in anti-plane shear, as shown in Fig. 29. The following quantities were calculated: q. stress required to spread plasticity across shorter ligament, assuming strip yielding model rLE value of v~. estimated from elastic stress resultants rG stress needed to spread plasticity across both ligaments (constraint factor is unity) The same numerical results apply to the mode I tensile analogy shown in Fig. 30, and may be considered as an approximation to the mode I loading of a single strip with an eccentric defect.
Then
(a~ + 3/4a~ + 3r2) t~z
Lr m
O'y
where
M ' + aN'~2 + { ( M ' + aN'~2) 2 + {N')2[(t -' - a2)/4 - ae]} l'z
a~ =
a. is the out-of-plane tensile stress and r-" is the sum of the squares of the shear stresses. For the assumed stress distribution to be valid N'>O M'>O
242
A. G. Miller
NOTCHED b u ~ c
(DEN) PLATES
T h e g e o m e t r y is s h o w n in Fig. 32.
4.1 Bending
4.1.1 Plane stress Tresca
c--
4M =I ay(t -- 2a) 2
This is not k n o w n but must satisfy 1 < c < 4.1.3 Plane strain Tresca 2 c4M - 1-38 o'y(t -- 2a) 2
x > 0"168
(e= 1).
4.1.4 Plane stra& Mises This is 1"155 times the plane strain Tresca limit load.
4.2 Tension
U n l i k e the S E N T geometry, there is no m o m e n t due to the eccentricity o f the tensile force. 4.2.1 Plane stress Tresca 49 N
C.~-
O'y(t - 2a)
=1
O<x<l
c = 1"155 c = 1 + l'08x
243
MA0 "
I
Q h I Q
,C
I
I I t
M N
Fig. 32. DEN geometry. N, Tension: M, bending moment; Q, mode II shear. The deep crack solution is exact. T h e shallow crack solution a n d the transitional value o f x are a p p r o x i m a t i o n s .
4.2.3 Plane strain Tresea 50 N
C--
try(t - 2a)
e = 1 + In (1 - x _--2~x)l rc c = I + }- = 2.57
x--,O c-, l + x
244
A. G. Miller
4.2.5 K u m a r et aL 2s give formulae which are not the correct limit loads. These results are not recommended for use.
4M -1 o'y(t -- 2a) 2
4.4.2 Plane stress Mises Not known but 1 ~<c~< 1"155. 4.4.3 Plane strah7 Tresca z
--
4M Cry(t -- 2a) 2
Deep cracks 0<:(<30 ~ 30 -~< ~ < 73.6 73.6 < x < 90 ~ c = 1.380 c = 1"380 - 0.280(:( - 7z/6)a c= 1+r~t2-~ to 0"2%
Green's results are upper bounds. The intermediate range of:t equation is a numerical fit to his bound. This merges continuously with the deep sharp crack result at ~ = 0 (c = 1"380) and the unnotched bar result at ~ = rt/2. The depth validity limits are unknown. The results are shown in Fig. 33. Dietrich and Szczepinski 35 give the complete slipline field for ~--75 ~, and their constraint factor is the same as above.
4.4.4 Plane strain Mises This is 1"155 times the plane strain Tresca limit load. A discussion o f combined tension and bending in plane strain for large notch angles and deep cracks is given by Shiratori and Dodd. z7
245
,..1.3
0
"6 ,.2
e.
o I.I
90
I=0
Fig. 33.
4M o'y(t - 2a) z
1"155.
G r e e n ' s results are u p p e r b o u n d s , a n d the e q u a t i o n s are r e p r e s e n t a t i o n s o f these b o u n d s to the s t a t e d a c c u r a c y . T h i s m e r g e s c o n t i n u o u s l y with the d e e p s h a r p c r a c k s o l u t i o n at r = 0 (e = 1"38) a n d the u n n o t c h e d b a r solution at r = ~ . F o r validity
1
1 - 2x > pC > 1-30
246
A. G. Miller
m
1.3
u
1.2
C 0
C 0
.1
.2
.3
,t. b b+r
.5
.6
.7
.8
.g
1.0
Fig. 34.
This is 1"155 times the plane strain Tresca limit load. A discussion of c o m b i n e d tension and bending in plane strain for large root radii and deep cracks is given by D o d d and Shiratori. 3~
N
ay(t - 2a)
--1
c = 1 + l'08x c = 1-155
c = 1 + 1.08x 0 < x < 0-143 sin [(re/2 - :0, 0.217] c = 1 + 0.155 sin [(rc/2 - ~)/0.217] 0"143 sin [(rc/2 - e)/0"217] < x < 0"5 (:~ in radians)
These are a p p r o x i m a t i o n s to numerical results. The deep crack results were given by Hill 5~ a n d F o r d a n d Lianis. ~8 The results are identical with the sharp crack results for ~ < 70.5 , and give the u n n o t c h e d bar results for = re/2. The results are s h o w n in Fig. 35, with b o t h upper and lower bounds.
247
f
o 1.10
C 0 (..)
N ros
Fig. 35.
DENT with V-notch: plane stress Mises (from Ford and Lianis~a).
c = 1 + r~/2 - :~
T h e t r a n s i t i o n o c c u r s w h e n the t w o e x p r e s s i o n s are equal, a n d so the s m a l l e r c o n s t r a i n t f a c t o r a l w a y s applies. E w i n g 52 generalizes this result to a l l o w for r > 0. T h e results are identical with the s h a r p c r a c k results for ~ = 0, for b o t h d e e p a n d s h a l l o w cracks, a n d with the u n n o t c h e d b a r results for :~ = re/2.
4.6.4 Plane strain Mises T h i s is 1-155 times the p l a n e strain T r e s c a limit load.
4.7 Tension: effect o f notch root radius
=1
4.7.2 Plane stress Mises 5t Deep cracks b/2r < 1"071 b/2r > 1"071
e = 1 + 0"226b/(b + 2r) c = 1"155 - O.080r/b
248
A. G. Miller
1.15
Hill's upper
1.10
//~.
Lower.
e- 1 . 0 5 o
1.0
0.1
b br
Fig. 36.
DENT with circular root: plane stress Mises (from Ford and LianisLS).
results. T h e y merge with the deep s h a r p n o t c h solution at r = 0 ( c = 1"155) and with the u n n o t c h e d b a r solution at r = vc. T h e d e p t h validity limits are not k n o w n , except at r = 0 and r = c~. T h e results are s h o w n in Fig. 36, with b o t h u p p e r a n d lower bounds.
N
ay(t - 2a)
/. = min
[7z/2, In (1 + b/2r)]
2r(e ~ -
1) 2
b/r:/.
= In (1 +
b/2r)<
2r/b)ln(1 + b/2r)
b/r:
In(1 +
1 - ~/2)
(
c=
2r
1+ b
2rt"l'/2 b2 j
(~_rr)
+ 1+ In
b
l+2r-2r
b(
2r
1+ b
2rt'~] '/2
t,-'J_]
W h e n r = 0 the solution is identical to that o f Ewing and Hill 5 for s h a r p notches, b o t h d e e p and shallow. F o r u n n o t c h e d bars
r= m Z=0
tc=b
249
depends on the order in which the limit is taken, but gives c ~ 1 if r--, oc is taken last. Ewing 52 also gives the effect of ~ > 0.
4.7.4 P l a n e s t r a i n M i s e s
N, is the pin-loaded S E N T result from Section 2.2. The experimental results are shown in Fig. 38 for the limit load based on a deformation criterion. For d = 0 this reduces to the Tresca plane stress D E N T solution (despite the use of the Mises yield criterion).
This is within 5% of the lower bound. The upper bound is potentially exact, but is an incomplete solution. In the zero shear limit, it agrees with the solution given in Section 4.1.3. The depth validity limits are also shown in Table 10. They are reduced by shear. The Mises limit load is greater by a factor of 1.155.
L
i
=-I
i
'
.....
(_
_ ~a .....
tr I-
',,
-/-
Location of defects
1 .0
.9
.~.= No
'/'Jt
.?
o
+t
.5
Olt =0.25
0 0
t t
~
~
,,:o.37+
,,=0~
at t =0.7
.,
0
}i
Fig. 38.
;_
~
I.O
2.0
I 3.0
~.0
I 5.0
Experimental results for bars with multiple defects and theoretical predictions (from Connors54). - - , Theoretical predictions.
251
M/MI
I
8/~ 2
0-6
o., 0.2 !j o
0-2
\'1 \\\
i
0"~
06
2/~ I ]
1
0-8
Fig. 39.
Q/Q1 Combined bending and mode II shear (from Ewing and Swingler~3).
TABLE 10 Combined Bending and Mode II Shear (from Ewing and Swingler43)
O/O,
Q,"Q I
0-000 0"050 0"100 0-150 0'200 0'250 0-300 0-350 0"400 0"450 0-500
0-550 0'600 0"650 0-700 0-750 0-800 0-850 0'900 0"950 ! "000
0-001
252
A. G. Miller
_.U n
M
l Iut't,
b
/N ) M
.....
Fig. 40. Asymmetric double-edge notched plate. 4.10 Combined tension, bending, mode 11 shear and out-of-plane stress
The solution given by Jeans, 43 quoted in Section 2.12.1, is a true lower b o u n d for this case (with uniform out-of-plane tensile stress across the section).
is the moment referred to the middle of ligament h I (= t - at). Assuming that the cracks are able to support compressive stress, then
"~ "~ 2 L r = [ 2 M t + (4M/- + N 2 h~) 1 2 ]/(ay/-,t)
,
provided that the compressive region is at least as deep as crack a_,. The height h of this region satisfies - h a y + (h t - h)cTy= N~.om,p~c= N,/L r so that
2h = h t - N / L , a y ~> 2a_,
(26)
a;t 'tl
bl N
t r
+
:x: (in c o n t a c t )
dl
d2 J ~c12
253
b~ - a z,
Ifeqn (26) fails, ignore material below some ligament 'b' lying between b~ and i.e. solve for b and L r the simultaneous equations L r = {2M" + [ 4 M ''2 + N 2 b 2 ] t / 2 } / u y b 2
b = 2a~ + N/Lray
where
a'~ = a z - b I + b M " = M I - N ( b I - b)/2
Alternatively, for very deep cracks a2 in compression, assume that only the outside part 'x' is compressed and that the system is equivalent to an internal crack (see Fig. 41). At collapse
N/L r
=
ay(bt - a2 - x )
M/Lr
= ry[(bl - a2)dt + x d 2 ]
which can be solved for x and Lr as unknowns. This gives an alternative lower bound.
5 S H O R T S U R F A C E C R A C K S IN PLATES 5.1 Wide plates in tension Ligaments in finite length cracks are stronger than ligaments in extended defects, as they derive support from the adjacent uncracked plate. If ligament failure is the subject of concern, then this 'local' limit load goes to zero as the ligament thickness goes to zero. This is in contrast to the 'global' limit load, which would tend to the through-cracked plate limit load (as in Section 3) as the ligament thickness tended to zero. Moreover, for wide plates (width >>defect length) the defect has no effect on the global limit load. a 2c t defect depth (see Fig. 42) defect surface length plate thickness
W
2c
254
1.0 D
A. G. Miller
0.8
0.~
/'~)e f f
0.5
, , ,
0 0.2 0 :, (li t 06 0.8 1.0
Fig. 43.
5.1.1
R6 Rev. 2 recommends that short surface cracks may be treated as extended defects with an equivalent depth given by
__
2t(2c+ t)
O<ff<0.8 t
(t)e=-at --2ca<0"1 No guidance is given for deep defects with a/t > 0"8. This is shown in Fig. 43. (There is a misprint in Fig. A2.2 in R6 Rev. 2 in the inequality limits.) There is not a smooth transition between short defects and extended defects, and the recommendation is arbitrary.
5.1.2
where f = (1 +~-)2cZ'~1'2
for extended cracks (c = oo) for zero length cracks (c = 0) for through cracks
ac=0
ae=a=t
255
He proposed that this formula applied to all geometries, not only plates. This transformation is analogous in form to the Battelle formulation in Section 8.2.3, which may be written
a[ 1 - (l/M)]
ae =
1-(a/tM)
where M is a function of both c/t and R/t (R is the cylinder radius): M1 + 1"05~-~-,/
C2 '~1/2
CheWs transformation gives a lower limit load for cylinders than the Battelle transformation, as f > M. This transformation is the simplest rational function with the above three properties.
5.1.3
Mattheck et al. 57 propose an expression for ligament yielding based on Dugdale model calculations. Their expression is tr = arM, where
M = (1 - I - 1.9071 1 + 1.5151(a)'16596(/)2
1 52(a']214'O(a'] 3
+ 4"356(ayl}[1- (t)"4 1 This equation can be applied for a/c < 0-7; ~r is applied membrane stress. This formula is shown in Fig. 44(a) and compared with their detailed numerical results. The results are compared with the above expressions from R6 and Chell in Fig. 44(b). It can be seen that in general the Mattheck result is most conservative and the R6 Rev. 2 result is least conservative. The R6 result has been plotted beyond the claimed validity limits for a/t.
5.1.4
Miller 9 derived a semi-empirical model for ductile failure (i.e. at L m~x) of surface defects and concluded that the reference strain at failure was
k t 1-a/t 4 c a/t
256
t.0
A. G. Miller
lo'f
0.5
o.,-----'~~
ale
0.5 0.3
0.7
0
O O. 5
1. 0
oil
(a)
1.0
o .......
0.5
~
i.O olt
1/fl'
(b) Fig. 44. Effectof surface crack length (from Mattheck et al:~). (a) - - - , Fitted equation: , numerical results. (b)'.-, Chell;---, Harrison ( R 6 1 ; - - , present method. where k is a material c o n s t a n t between 0.4 and 1"5 for mild steel. This strain m a y be used to give an a p p r o p r i a t e stress for use with the limit load.
5.1.5
If this strain (Section 5.1.4) is below the yield strain, then Miller r e c o m m e n d e d t h a t a simplified line spring model could be used to estimate the load at which the ligament goes plastic. F o r pin-loading with remote load cry, this is given by O" x
GF
(I
Aft)
1 l+v
where
m~-m
2c
257
2[
mm
mb=
bm
bb
oI o
[ 0.2
I O.t,
I 0.6
I
0.8
I 1.0
Fig. 45.
a n d ~ is s h o w n in Fig. 45. ~ m a y be c a l c u l a t e d f r o m f o r m u l a e g i v e n b y E w i n g : 5s
x =- a/t
y -- 1 -- x
~ij = nlij
ifx<0"5 if x > 0"5 if x < 0"5 if x > 0"5 if X < 0"5 if X > 0"5
I m m ( x ) = O ' 6 2 9 4 4 x 2 ( l + 5"474xZ + 1 3 " 3 8 x 4 - - 3 2 x S + 58"32x6) = (0"629 4 4 / y 2 ) [ 1 -- 2"944)' + 1"0834y 2 In (1/2y) + 2"667) '2]
Imb(X) = 0"209 8 lx2(3 - 2"4x + 9"487x 2 + 43"4x 3 -- 142"07x 4 + 173"6x 5 -- 27"89x 6) = (0"209 81/)'2)(1 -- 1"4723' + 0"370 6 4 y 2) lbb(X) = 0"069 938xZ(9 -- 14"4X + 46"98X z -- 46X 3 + 89"02X 4 -- 184X 5 + 193"9X 6) = (0"069 938/y2)(1 -- 1"3404) '2)
258
A. G. Miller
5.1.6
An alternative geometrical approach suggested by the Welding Institute (pers. comm.) is that the stress is unloaded from the crack on to the nearest part of the cracked structure. The critical load is taken as that which the thinner ligament first yields, using a local fixed grip criterion: (1 - x)(1 af =
x + 2R/t)a m -
1 - 2x + 2R/t (c2/a
It is recommended that the global collapse load is used if the criterion given in Section 5.1.4 is satisfied. Otherwise the local collapse load given in Section 5.1.5 should be used. The above solutions have only considered a single surface defect. They all have the limiting behaviour
C t
>> I
O"m o'f (7 m
---* I -
(I
-
af
Therefore it is suggested that in the case of an extended defect of variable depth, the ligament thickness should be taken as an average thickness over a length equal to the plate thickness, and a local fixed grip criterion used: am- 1
o'f
c~
[
When the plate width is not much greater than the defect length, the global collapse load limit is reduced by the presence of the defect. For rectangular surface defects in a plate under fixed grip loading, the constraint factor is unity:
F= ayA
F A
259
5.2.1 A review of CEGB and Welding Institute test results is given by Miller. 59 The degree of gtrain hardening is observed to increase with increasing ligament thickness. Miller 59 gives the nominal strain at failure as kt(t - a) 4ca[ 1 - (2c/w)] "
w k
A lower bound to the final plate failure load after ligament snap-through is given by F = a,A o, where A o is the net-section area without the ligament.
5.2.2 Hasegawa et al. 6 observed a similar increase with ligament thickness of the net-section stress at the onset of crack penetration. They empirically put the ligament stress cr~ and the stress cr~ in the rest of the plate as
~rl = (1 - R)crf
A lower bound to the final plate failure load was given by F = A o m i n l a , , a f + ( a . - O'f)( 1 --a/t~210"9 }_] which is slightly lower than that given in Section 5.2.1.
5.2.3 Mattheck and Goerner 6t used a strip yielding model where the stress along the crack front and along the ligament centre-line was a u, just before ligament rupture, whereas the stress at the end of the plastic zone at the surface is reduced to the yield stress. Although detailed results were not presented, this will also give an increase of net-section stress with ligament thickness. Agreement with ligament rupture test results was good. 5.2.4 Munz 62 gives a review of surface cracks. He also reports further plate tests of Goering, which agreed with the hardening models of Sections 5.2.2 and 5.2.3, but where the maximum load was underestimated by using flow stress. 5.2.5 The above are concerned mainly with the ductile instability cut-off at Lr max. Miller t2 reviewed published J calculations for surface defects in plates in
260
A. G. Miller
tension. He concluded that using net-section (global) collapse gave better reference stresses fo/" J estimation than using local collapse. It is recommended, therefore, to use the global collapse load for J estimation. Provided the strain criterion criterion of Section 5.2.1 is satisfied, it may also be used for ductile instability assessment. If it is not satisfied, then a local limit load should be used for ductile instability.
F = ~/9 20"y
deep sharp notch 63'6"~ F c-- - - = 2 " 8 5 7~h20"y or similarly v h R<0"31
4'--
F _ ~'2.85 rtb2ay ( R / b
The deep solution is exact, but the shallow solution is an approximation. This shallow solution is continuous with the unnotched bar result and the deep notch result. Ewing's results are quoted by Haigh and Richards, ~6 and are thought to be accurate to 6%.
261
(Shield) -%,,curve
heotetical
2=.
f>p.
~. "%%.~ "'~
f u ..L / % . 0"~
2b
Moteriol oluminium
16
1.4 1.2
1.0 J i I I
% ~ '~'
I
75"
~1 ,
90
15
30"
45
(7,.
G0"
Fig. 46. Theoretical and experimental values of the constraint factors. , Axial symmetry calculated points: A , experimental ./;r points (yield point); ff], experimental fu.~. points (ultimate load). (From Szczepinski et al. 65)
Fig. 47 and are slightly less restrictive than those give by Shield. Experimental results are also shown in Fig. 46. A lower bound that is within 4% o f the results in Fig. 46 is
c - - ~,rcb2 - 2"85 - a -
3'7:~
7~
(x in radians)
30 e 60 9 0 l z 0 " l S 0
180
.-.-.~-
Notch
angle
20(
Theoretical values of the R/b ratio for V-notched bars (from Szczepinski et al.65).
262
A. G. Miller
TABLE I I C o n s t r a i n t Factors for Axisymmetric Bars with a R o u n d N o t c h under Tension
h/r 0
I/3 1/2 I 2 2"5 3 4
Bridgman 66 I
1.078 I'115 1-215 1.386 1.524 1.649
Siehe168 I
1.083 1.125 1.250 1.500
S:czepinski et al. 6~ I
Mises yield criterion (except for Szczepinski et al., 65 who uses Tresca): 7~b2o.y
(l
d-
In
(Bridgman 66)
F b -- ~b2o.y - 1 + ~
These both reduce to a constraint factor of unity for an unnotched bar. The formulae are compared numerically in Table 11. The Davidenkov form is the small b/r limit of the Bridgman formula. At large b/r the constraint factor must be limited by the sharp notch result:
b/r = ~
c = 2"85
Szczepinski gives an approximate deep crack validity limit: -->2"95 b R -->1 b 1-1-68 -<0.4 b r -=~ b
Some geometries with longer notches were considered by Szczepinski et al., 65 and the constraint factor is shown in Fig. 48, along with the experimental results. (There is an inconsistency in the description of the geometry in the paper.) Hoffman and Seeger 69 give a finite-element result: R = 2 r 1 b - 11"~ - 0"085 c = 1"90
This is bounded above by Ewing's result for r = 0 in Section 6.1 (c = 2), as it should be. It is bounded below by Szczepinski's result for rib = 0-4 (c = 1"65), also as it should be.
263
c'" I,.,
1,5 ~/theoret#cal curve
~ .
,_~
I
,~
Material: mild steel
,_-t.,~
Ld
IX
~1"1
0,, ,
"~...~n, ,~....~,,
.
e
. . .
d/b
Fig. 48. Theoretical and experimental values of the constraint factors. O, Axial symmetry calculated points; A, experimentalfyp points; 0, experimentalfu.Lpoints. (From Szczepinski
et aL 65)
The constraint factor is unity for all notch geometries: 3T c=/tb3o. ~ 1 Tresca 3x/3 T c = .---=-=-= 1 Mises _ 2rcb~cT, (Walgh and Mackenzie 7)
6.5 Round bar with chordal crack under bending R a b bar radius crack depth ligament depth ( 2 R - a) M L collapse bending m o m e n t M o collapse value for uncracked bar T L collapse twisting m o m e n t To collapse value for uncracked bar
b/R
Crack depth ,.a
Ir v 3
2R
EwingVn).
Ligament depth, b
t
Fig. 49. Schematic diagram of a bar containing a chordal crack (from Akhurst and
264
ML 1.0
A. G. Miller
0.9
0.8
(P
0.7 0.6 O.S
'
6)"
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
01
0.1
0)2
0.3
01.4
O'.S al 2R
016
0~7
0.'
0.9
Fig. 50. Lower bound bending moments for p.lastic collapse of chordally cracked bar in bend (from Akhurst and Ewing7~). M L. Bending moment for plastic collapse; Mo, bending moment of untracked bar at plastic collapse; a, crack depth; R, bar radius.
The geometry is shown in Fig. 49. Akhurst and Ewing v ~ give a lower bound Tresca solution, shown in Fig. 50 and Table 12 for O<b/r< 1: uncracked deep cracks Mo=
4R3ay/3
b< R
ML/Mo=
(0"315 - 0"05)')3 .5 2
265
a/2R
0
0-05 0-1 0-15 0-2 0-25 0.3 0-35 0-4 0.45 0.5 0'55 0.6 0-65 0.7 0-75 0.8 0-85 0.9 0.95 1
torque is reduced. The results for both cases are shown in Fig. 51 and Table 12: uncracked
6.6.1
TO= n R 3 a y / 3
b< R
b< R
6.7 Round bar with chordal crack under combined torsion and bending
Akhurst and Ewing ~ give a lower bound formula:
( M / M L ) 2 + (T/TL) 2 = 1
266
TL To
A. G. Miller
0.9
0.8
Fully rigid
0.7
bar.
0. S
0.4
0.3
0.2
Fig. 51. Lower bound torque or plastic collapse of chordally cracked bar subject to a torsional loading at its ends (from Akhurst and EwingV~). TL, Plastic collapse torque; To, plastic collapse torque of uncracked bar; a, crack depth; R, bar radius. where ML and TL are taken from Sections 6.5 and 6.6 respectively. This applies for both constrained and unconstrained torsion.
7 G E N E R A L SHELL S T R U C T U R E S 7.1 Shell parameters The above plane stress and plane strain solutions for edge notched plates have had a detailed treatment of the through-thickness stress variation. With shells the effect of curvature is an extra complication, and the throughthickness stress variation is usually reduced to direct stress resultants and
267
bending moments. The solutions are usually expressed in terms of a shell parameter p: c
p = (Rt)l/2
where c = characteristic defect length, R = characteristic shell radius and t = thickness. The simplest shell structures are those with membrane stress solutions (e.g. spheres and cylinders). Considering pressure loading, the limit pressure tends to the m e m b r a n e solution for the uncracked shell as p --, 0, and to the membrane solution for the cracked shell as p-~ ~ (this will be zero for through-cracked shells). The limit pressure is a non-increasing function ofp. The tendency for the limit pressure to approach the membrane solution for the cracked shell as p increases may be demonstrated on the assumption that plasticity is confined to a shallow region round the crack. Then in Cartesian coordinates the equilibrium equations controlling are (neglecting terms of order t/R) ~'2M U c~x, ~xj + ~qjN, j = P where J,- is the curvature tensor. Introducing the dimension variables x,
Xi E l
_
Kij :
RKij
F/ij --
p2 R - 1 -rcii =
Rt
c2
4Mij
O'yl 2
Nij
fly/
IHij
--
p-
PR
O'yl
t- K, jn~j = p
Since m, n, K and X are all of order unity, as p increases, the size of the bending term is reduced, and hence the pressure tends to the membrane solution. This also demonstrates that p is the relevant parameter when local effects predominate. Limit loads for some defect-free shell structures are shown in Fig. 52.
Pro
_ r I sm
r c~1
268
A. G. Miller
e~
-=
-"
=
e
= = E c.U
.4: i~ i, r~
ii
"E
C u~
U E
.%
.=_
z-::
"J ~a
..-:
:~o~
o" -"
r_..
L~
oo
,,.
r~
br,
o oo_~
,,
UlVlv
269
where 4) is the co-latitude, r o is the circle of latitude radius, r x is the meridional radius of curvature and
rl------
1 dr o cos 4, d4,
Hence, for an axisymmetric defect at 4,0 of depth a in a shell of thickness t, the membrane lower b o u n d to the limit pressure is given by P = 2ay(t - a) sin 4'0
go
This assumes that the defect is deep enough to determine the limit pressure, and only applies if this pressure is less than the limit pressure of the defectfree shell. The value of N0 at the defect does not have to be considered, as it can be discontinuous. For meridional cracks, the effect of the defect on the limit pressure is given by the following constraints:
NO( 4'o) t
where 4'0 is the value of 4' along the defect that gives the lowest limit pressure.
7.3 Approximate lower bound for part-through defect for pressure loading
If a lower bound limit pressure for a through-thickness defect and the membrane limit pressure for a defect-free structure, of the same geometry, are both known, then a lower b o u n d solution for the part-through-thickness case may be determined. 73-~5 If the solutions are lower b o u n d Pl[t] membrane
Pm[t]
where these refer to the solutions for a shell of thickness t, then a lower bound for the part-through-thickness case is
P = P,[a] + P m [ t - a]
It may be seen that this is compatible with a statically admissible stress field. An alternative lower b o u n d approach, due to Goodall (see Millerg), is to split the structure into the ligament and a through-cracked shell of the original thickness t. Then a lower bound to the case when the ligament is in pure tension is given by
P = P,[t] + Pm[t -- a]
270
A. G. Miller
N u = membrane stress produced by pressure P, parallel to crack for crackfree shell Then the limit pressure is given by P = R 2 \1 + p2 + R1 cryt/ provided 0 <~NH <<.ayt. For axial defects in cylinders this gives (as in Section 8.1.1) P _ ayt 1 R l+p 2 For meridional defects in spheres it gives P _ 2ayt 1 R l+p 2
8 C Y L I N D E R S WITH A X I A L D E F E C T S A N D R E C T A N G U L A R NOTCHES Only pressure loading is considered here. Test results for this were reviewed by Miller. 77 Axial defects theoretically have no effect on the limit moment
271
for beam bending of the cylinder with respect to a diametral plane. Experimentally there is a slight effect,vs Through-wall bending stresses are not normally considered to contribute to the collapse load. The recommendation of the empirical Battelle formulae in Sections 8.1 and 8.2 is based upon analysing burst pressure results where no allowance was made for tearing. Therefore their use to evaluate the yield point load and L r is an approximation.
8.1.1
Kitching eta[. 79 consider rectangular defects both experimentally and theoretically. The material was mild steel. Their experimental loads were determined by a deformation criterion, and are adequately explained for axial defects by a limit pressure given by P = ayt
R l+p 2
R 1 + ( 1 + 8 p 2 ) ~/2 +Cp
p>l
p=ayt I
where
c
p<l
p = (Rt)l/2
2c = defect length
C is a constant introduced because the experimental failure pressures were higher than the theoretical pressures. (This might be due partly to the use of zyrather than ~r.) The limit analysis comes from a lower bound solution for rectangular holes using the two-moment limited interaction yield surface. For a strict lower bound solution, C should be set equal to zero.
8.1.2
The most commonly used collapse formulation is an empirical expression due to Kiefner et al. 8 at Battelle. This is based on an adaptation of Folias' L E F M result:
PR ~yt
1 M(p)
M(p) = (1 +
1"61p2) 12
(Folias sl)
M(p) = (1 +
1"05p2) 1/2
(Folias s2)
272
1.0
A. G. Miller
PR
~t
1 Kiefner
1,0
1.10 P
31.0
4!o
There is little to choose between these two in the region of practical interest, 0 < p < 7. In the original Battelle formulation for pipeline steel ar = ay + 10 ksi - ay + 69 MPa In an R6 assessment, it is more usual to use Gf = (% + G,)/2 For the Battelle steels the two definitions agreed within 0.5% to 1% over most of the range, and the maximum discrepancy was 3.2%.
8.1.3
Ew'ing ~'~ has calculated an upper bound and an approximate lower bound limit pressure. As R / t ~ ~ , both his solutions tend to 0"82/p, compared with the Battelle limit of 0.79/p.
8.1.4
Miller 77 has compared the Kitching and Kiefner expressions with experimental results, and concluded that the Kiefner expression based on Folias 81 gave better agreement. The different theoretical expressions are compared in Fig. 53. 8.2 Surface axial defects The geometry is shown in Fig. 54. 2c = detect length R = cylinder radius t = cylinder thickness b = ligament thickness
q = b/t
273
_l
I i
2 I t
Fig. 54.
8.2.1 The penetrating crack expressions may be used to give a lower bound estimate of the global collapse pressure by the method given in Section 7.3: PR crrt
~_.
-----3
a t
l-
Ewing TM showed that this gave higher limit pressures than in Section 8.2.3, and therefore was non-conservative in general. However, the global collapse pressure may be used for certain geometries (Section 1.8 or Millerg).
8.2.2 Ewing TM derived an upper bound limit pressure. It is not representable by an analytic formula, and for short or shallow cracks gives a pressure greater than that for the uncracked shell. 8.2.3 The most commonly used formula is again an empirical Battelle result: s PR q ~rrt 1 - (1 - q)/M(p)
where M(p) is taken from the through-crack result. This is a local collapse estimate and is not continuous at q = 0 with the through-crack result. Therefore leak-before-break and catastrophic failure distinctions may be made. In this formulation, for cracks with r/<
1
1 + M(p)
< 1/2
the collapse pressure for the through-cracked cylinder is more than that o f the surface-cracked cylinder, so the cylinder is stable after ligament failure
274
A. G. Miller
and a 'leak' results. For thicker defects, the through-wall defect is not stable and a catastrophic 'break' results.
8.2.4 Ruiz 83 gave an approximate expression, but it is not recommended for use, as it does not agree with other results in various limiting cases. 8.2.5 The above thin shell formulae do not distinguish between internal and external defects, or between rectangular and semi-elliptical defects. There is not adequate experimental evidence to judge these effects. Chel184 has proposed empirical expressions for internal defects:
[1 + 1.61p2(1
r/)] t/2
8.2.6 The above are concerned with ductile instability at Lr maX.Miller t2 compared published J calculations with reference stress estimates. He concluded that the best estimate was given by the global collapse pressure as in Section 8.2.1: PR =1 ayt a t a/t (1 + 1.61c2/Ra) 1/2
1"05p2) 1/2]
275
,&_It
P=~{A P = ayt
where
c
A x i s of
stoi
When A is not small compared with unity, there is no experimental evidence, but the theoretical limit pressure is given by (1--2p2A)2 (1-2p2A)[(1-2p2A)2+8p2(1--A)]t"2} 4p 2 -t 4p 2 p~< 1
R l+p 2
p>~l
p =--(Rt)l/2
2c = defect length in axial direction R = cylinder radius
8.3.2
Kitching and Zarrabi s5 consider surface defects (Fig. 55) which include axial and circumferential defects as limiting cases. The limit pressure is given by
O'ut
p =- (Rt)l/2
2c = defect axial length R = cylinder radius t = cylinder thickness
A =- t
q = -t
The most important parameters are p and ~/. For open-ended shells, A and q5 are only o f minor importance. For closed-ended shells, q~is only important when q < 0-5, and when q~ is greater than a critical value which depends on q.
276
A. G. Miller
e,l
i
~ ~ ~ ~1 i~l N ~'~1 (" ~
~ ~ ~.~,
d~
.~
L ~
~.
f'M e~
~o~
i ~ '~ ' ~ ~ - ~ ~ ~
277
71-'0.1
0.90
0.96
0.96
P
0.94
p=0.1 /.R t
=20
tO o .9~.
0.92
0.92
0.90
0.90
90"
q)
190" 1. o
I 90
J Ie0"
(O) l.O
1]= 0.9
(c) 1]=0.9
0.8
o.e
0.6 P
o.&
0.6
P
o.&
j:) = I0 t.R
-i.-=2ooo
0,2
0.2
"q = 0.1
90"
a-] -- o . i
~)
! SO
90"
iRi0o
(Io)
(d)
Fig. 56.
Theoretical limit pressures for cylinders with part-through thickness rectangular defects (from Kitching and Zarrabi85). Open-ended.
The results were obtained from a lower bound analysis using the twom o m e n t limited interaction yield criterion. The experimental results are shown in Table 13. 86 The material was aluminium.
external P = ay - - r i
t--a
278
A. G. Miller
"q =o.9
11 = 0 . 9
1.0
1.o
0.8
0.8
0.6
0,6
P 0.4
p:01
P 0,4
p=0.1
'=20 O.Z
. ooo
L"
Co)
0.2
45"
90
(a)
1.0 1.0
11=o9
0.8
"/1 =0.9
0.8
0.6
0.6
p:10 P 0.4
'=20
O.Z "11=0.1
/,I..~ I
0.2
"TI = 0.I
I .J
90" (b)
45" ~ (d)
90"
This does not reduce to the uncracked thick wall result in the limit a ~ 0 (e.g. Hill, s3 p. 268): P = ayln (rr--)
\ / /
P = ~73 a, In ~
(to)
The Mises open-ended solution tends to the Tresca solution at small ro/r i and to the Mises closed solution at large ro/ri: ro outer radius r~ inner radius
Hill's solution may be used to give an approximate solution for the cracked
279
Fig. 58. Geometry of cone with meridional defect. cylinder by putting r i ---,ri + a for internal defects and ro ~ r o - a for external defects.
Nx = l/2Pxcot~
Hence with the Tresca yield criterion the limit pressure is given by P = o'y(t a) x m cot
-
This always gives a lower bound. In the case of short cracks, the stress gradients are high and the membrane solution becomes very pessimistic. Locally the cone may be regarded as behaving like a cylinder of the same local radius. With the substitutions R=xcot~ 0 " - - 0sin~
and the assumptions that the principal stress directions are the x,O coordinate directions, and that ~N >>-N ~x x then the equilibrium equations become identical to those for a cylinder of radius R. Although the boundary conditions round the circumference will not be satisfied as 0 has been rescaled, ifthe plasticity is localized in 0 this will not matter.
280
A. G. Miller
An approximate argument for the conditions dN/dx >>N/x may be given. The distance over which the membrane stress resultants vary by a f r a c t i o n f is given by
If L is greater than, say solution will be sensibly constant over the region of plasticity. Taking x = 2 (the value at the crack centre) and f = 10%, then the cylinder solution will be a reasonable approximation if c 1 2 15 If this condition is not satisfied, then the membrane solution should be used.
8.6.1
Griffiths ss derived a lower bound limit pressure for a cylinder with a uniform array o f rectangular holes. This is itself a lower bound to the limit pressure of a cylinder with a regular array of circular nozzles, claiming no strength from the nozzles. The method is an extension of that of Kitching et al. v9 (Section 8.3.2) and uses the two-moment limited interaction yield surface. The geometry is defined in Fig. 59. Only 5 < R/t < 10 is considered,
~
,2d
_2_
2d
I
(a)
g.
(b) Fig. 59. Geometry of multiple defects. (a) Plan view ofvessel with uniformly pitched defects; (b) section through vessel.
281
c p = (R/t)l/2 q-1
C
F o r i n t e r a c t i n g defects p=
p=q
1.0
P< 1
p>l
"
0.9
0.9
---0.8
0.8
0.7 _
-"
0.6
= in
0.5
--0.4
"~ _.i 0. t,
-.
L=0.3
0.3
0.2
R --=5 t
| 0.2
I O.&
p2
j 0.6
~ (18
I 1.0
Fig. 60.
-,Lowerbound;---,
282
A. G. Miller
1.0
>,
0.8
~
-BS 806 ~
-
defect
C q~
0.6
E
0
0.4
0 0,2
Interocting
defects
0.2
0.4
p~
0.6
0.8
1.0
Fig. 61.
This is shown in Fig. 60. The critical value of the ligament efficiency below which the defects interact is given by
1
q = 1 + [2p2(1 - - p l ) ] t/2 wherep~ is the limit pressure of a single defect taken from Section 8.3.2. This is shown in Fig. 61.
8.6.2
Griffiths 8s gives an upper bound limit pressure for the same problem as p=q+-(1 + r/)t 8R
Wilson and Griffiths 9 tested five vessels with multiple defects to check the applicability of thin shell theory to vessels with 2 < R / t < 5. Provided rt > 0-5, the lower bound theoretical results were within 10% of the experimental results.
8.6.4
Kitching et al. 9~ considered a cylinder with two circular holes. When the holes were arranged circumferentially, they concluded that the limit pressure was not reduced. When the holes were arranged axially, essentially the same result as in Section 8.6.1 was derived. They tested 23 mild steel vessels and showed that the theoretical predictions were conservative.
283
F,zt.
II
I2ct I
II 2c
1-1
CyLinder a~is
Fig. 62. Schematic geometry of multiple nozzles and associated defects (from Miller92"93).
8.6.5
the strength of the nozzles, for the presence of axial cracks touching alternate nozzles, and for the axial array also being repeated regularly in the circumferential direction. The geometry is shown in Fig. 62. Because of the large number of geometrical parameters the results were presented as a linear programme, with only a sample set of results. The method showed that the lower bound of Griffiths was slightly overstressed, but only by at most 5% for the geometries that they considered. It should be noted that the expressions in Sections 8.6.1-8.6.4 were really directed at giving lower bound estimates for cylinders with nozzles rather than cylinders with defects. Also they are based on the analysis due to Kitching e t aL 79 for single defects, which has been shown to be conservative.
9 CYLINDERS WITH C I R C U M F E R E N T I A L DEFECTS U N D E R PRESSURE AND BENDING The loading cases considered here are internal pressure, tension and beam bending with respect to a diametral plane (see Fig. 63). This type of bending arises in system stresses in pipework. Through-wall bending stresses are not normally considered to contribute to the collapse load. Test results for pressure loading were reviewed by Miller, 77 and for bending and combined bending and pressure were reviewed by Miller. 94 Notation (see Fig. 63): M= P= R= t= c= moment pressure radius thickness defect half length
m = M/4R2taf p = PR/2a d
a = defect depth
q = 1 - a/t [3 = c / R : = clrtR
284
A. G. Miller
F = T t R 2 P
J Fig. 63.
The circumferential defects are always centred on the peak bending stress in the situations considered.
Pressure loading is often considered to be equivalent to axial tensile loading, giving the same end force. The hoop stresses are ignored. This is a valid approximation for thin shells, but is non-conservative for thick shells.
The net-section collapse formula was given by Kastner m = 4R2tcr r = cos fl--*O m-,l-~2 m-,
e t al.: 95
/3
fl-~Tt
_/3)3
1----6-
This is shown in Fig. 64. It is normalized with respect to the plain pipe collapse moment.
9.1.2
The result given by Kastner e t al. 9 s in Section 9.3.2 may be specialized to pure bending. It is based on the load to first yield: M
l~ R "-t a r
=-l(rr-fl
7z
2sin2fl
7~ - - fl
si2-2/3)
fl-,0
m--+~" 1--
fl+=
m+--~-
1-
285
1.2
1.0 ~ , ,
~R2to-f
"Net
"~Net
\
06
06
O.&
0.2
~
0 I
02
( empirical )
I O.t.
~ 0,6
0.8
I 1.0
Fig. 64.
9.1.3 Kanninen et aL 96 recommended that for short cracks the limit moment from Section 9.1.1 should be reduced by multiplying by an ovalization correction factor, V(/3):
V(/3) = (rt/4)[1 + 0"067(2/3) + 0"000 38(2/3)-' + 0"008 76(2/3)3] /3 ~< 1"17
V(/3 = 1"17)= 1
This is shown in Fig. 64.
The theoretical expression is shown in Fig. 64. The experimental data only covers up to z = 0"15, and the expression is monotonic only up to z = 0-54. It is normalized with respect to the bending m o m e n t at first yield for the plain pipe rather than the limit load.
9.1.5 Miller 94 compared test results and finite-element J calculations with the above expressions, and concluded that the net-section collapse shown in Section 9.1.1 gave good agreement, though there was a short crack ovalization effect in the test results as described in Section 9.1.3. The J calculations also showed a similar effect, even though they were small deformation calculations. Further experiments by G r u n m a c h 9a confirm
286
A. G. Miller
213
Fig. 65. Geometry of surface circumferential defects. that the results in Section 9.1.1 give reasonable agreement for the maximum moment, when allowance is made for crack growth.
or
l+r/
Different expressions are needed according to whether the neutral axis is in the flaw or not. If the flaw is in a compressive region, then it might be assumed that it did not have a weakening effect, and the less pessimistic uncracked result would be used instead. The expression here reduced to that given in Section 9.1.1 when r/= 0, to the plain pipe at r/= 1 or/3 = 0, and to the m e m b r a n e solution f o r / / = n. The plain pipe solution may be obtained by differentiating the expression for a bar in Section 6.5 with respect to R. The expression is plotted in Fig. 66.
287
0.8
0.6 r1'i
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.4
0.6
0. a
1.0
9.2.2
Kastner 9s says unconservative. that the generalization given in Section 9.1.2 is
9.2.3
An empirical result given by Wilkowski and Eiber 97 using the same penetrating/surface crack transformation as Kiefner used for axial cracks. This is a local collapse expression: M q 1 - (1 - tl)/M o M o = from penetrating crack expression
rcR2tar
9.2.4
Willoughby 99 gave an empirical lower bound: M
288
I
A. G. Miller
! t I i I'
1.2
1,1
D
~a
M ~rR2t~ 0.9
1.0
0x . 8
0.7 0.6
0.5
I I I I I I
~ ~
(~-q.) 213 Fig. 67. Comparisonbetween failure stress and fl for circumferentialdefectsin pipes under bending, x, , Wilkowski and Eiber;9~ I-I, GIover et al. 1
9.2.5
o.~
0.2
0.3
o.~
o. s
0.6
0,7
Miller 9" compared test results with the theoretical expressions and concluded that the net-section collapse given in Section 9.2.1 gave the best agreement.
R a n t a - M a u n u s and Achenbach, L2 K a n n i n e n et al. ~a and Schulze et al. 14 propose a net-section collapse formula based on a simple stress distribution analogous to the Tresca plane stress SENT plate case: p = 1 - fl + 2 sin- 1(sin ill2) rc If fl < 50 , failure due to the hoop stress occurs first, using this model.
289
9.3.2
Kastner et al. 95 propose an expression based on an elastic stress distribution (ignoring stress concentrations or singularities at the defect):
1
I+
9.3.3
Eiber et al. ~5 propose a similar expression but without the enhanced uniform axial stress term: 1 -=10 p rc 2 sin fl[cos fl + sin/3/(r~ -/3)] ~ - / 3 rc - fl - 2 sin 2/3/(~ -/3) - sin 2/3/2
9.3.4
Kitching et aL 79 (Section 8.3.2) give a lower bound expression for the limit pressure for rectangular defects, but in the limit of zero axial extent it is invalid. In the short defect limit fl---, 0 p--, 1 ---2fl
7~
p ~ 1 - 3fl
_/3)3
P--' P~ 8rr
-/3)3
15rc
The 'constraint factors' are less than unity because of the need to carry the m o m e n t due to the ligament eccentricity. Sometimes a plastic collapse analysis similar to that in Section 9.3.1 is done, but the defect is not taken into account when it is a region of compressive stress. ~6 The above expressions are compared in Table 14 and Fig. 68.
9.3.5
Miller 77 compared them with experimental results and concluded that the Kastner expression gave the best agreement, although there were very few results and these showed a lot of scatter. Miller 94 compared finite-element J calculations for tensile loading with reference stress predictions based on net-section collapse and showed that the agreement was reasonable.
290
A. G. Miller TABLE 14 Comparison of Limit Pressure Solutions for Through Circumferential Cracks
#/~
Net section 0-00 0"05 0"10 0"!5 0"20 0-25 0-30 0"35 0-40 0"45 0"50 I "00 0-90 0"80 0"70 0-61 0"52 0'44 0'36 0"29 0"22 0'167
p
Kastner et al. 95 1-00 0-85 0"71 0"58 0-47 0"38 0-30 0"23 0-174 0"130 0-095 Eiber et al. t5 1'00 0"89 0-77 0"65 0-54 0'43 0'34 0'26 0-197 0-145 0-105
#/~
Net section 0'55 0'60 0"65 0-70 0"75 0-80 0'85 0"90 0-95 1.00 0" 121 0'085 0"056 0"035 0"020 0"010 0'004 2 0"001 2 0"0002 0
p
Kastner et al. 95 0"067 0"046 0'030 0-018 7 0"010 6 0'005 4 0"0022 0"0006 0'000 1 0 Eiber et al. 15 0'073 0"050 0-032 0"020 0-011 0-0055 0"0023 0"0006 0"0001 0
Therefore the net-section collapse expression given in Section 9.3.1 is recommended. This approximation ignores the interaction between hoop stress and axial stress, which is usually conservative. Also these results apply to any end loading if rcR2p is replaced by the total axial force. The cracks must always be sufficiently long that the hoop stress does not cause failure.
9.4 Surface circumferential defects under pressure
The relevant parameters are the crack angle 2fl and the fractional ligament thickness r/ (see Fig. 65). No distinction is made between internal and external flaws, or with regard to defect shape.
10
on (Acherlbach)
6 .4 .2
I I ! I
-2
.6
Fig. 68.
291
9.4.1 Schulze et al. t4 propose a net-section collapse formula (global collapse): n This reduces to the expression given in Section 9.3.1 when ~/= 0 gives the membrane solution for an axisymmetric defect: /3== p=q p=l /3(1 - r/) + 2 sin- t[(1 - q) sin fl/2]
9.4.2 Kastner et al. 95 propose a formula based on an approximate elastic distribution (local collapse): 1 P 7r 2(1 - r/)sin/3 7r_/3(l_n)+r/[rr_/3(l_r/)] or r/[n -/3(1 - r/)] P - =r/ + 2 ( 1 - q) sin /3
This is based on the following assumptions (quoting unpublished work of Ewing): (i) The stress could be divided into membrane and bending components. (ii) The membrane stress was uniform over the cracked cross-section. (iii) The bending stress was calculable by beam theory applied to the uncracked cross-section, and over the cracked cross-section concentrated by dividing by ( 1 - a/t). (iv) Across the cracked section these assumed stresses are statically equivalent to the applied load. Ewing also points out that for large angles the pressure falls below the membrane value: p<q for 71-4 < f l < 180 or 1.23rad < f l < r r (for all q)
This expression does not reduce to that given in Section 9.3.2 when q = 0. Like the Battelle surface crack formulae q=0 9.4.3 Chell 8~ has proposed: (i) Local ligament failure--Battelle transformation on through-crack plastic collapse: q P = 1 - (1 - q)/Mo(fl) p=0
292
1.0
A. G. Miller
I I I
0.75 Global
t
\
~t%
O.Io-
P 0.5
tt ( K a s t n e r )
Membrane
0.25
L
I
L
I 60 * I 90
I
B
I 120 I 150 I 180 o
I 30*
Fig. 69.
Surface circumferential defects under pressure with experimental results from KWU (Kastner et al.gs). L, Leak; B, break; a/t = 0.75; a * = af/l.2.
where Mo is the through-crack plastic collapse factor, as in Section 9.3.1: 1 /~ + 2 sin- 1(sin/3/2) p=---1
Mo(fl) x
The Schulze et al. 14 and Kastner et al. 95 expressions are compared in Table 15 and Fig. 69. Miller 7v compared them with experimental results and concluded that the Kastner expression gave better agreement, although evidence was limited. Miller 94 concluded that net-section collapse gave acceptable agreement for combined pressure and bending.
9.4..5
The above thin shell formulae do not distinguish between internal and external defects, or between rectangular and semi-elliptical defects. Intuitively, there seems likely to be less difference between internal and external circumferential defects than in the axial case. These results apply to any end loading if g R 2 P is replaced by the total axial force. The crack must
Review of limit loads o f structures containing defects TABLEI5 CompafisonofLimitPressureSolutions ~ r S u r h c e C r a c k s 0"1 G 0"00 0"05 0' 10 0'15 0"20 0'25 0"30 0"35 0.40 0"45 0"50 0'55 0"60 0"65 0'70 0"75 0"80 0"85 0"90 0"95 1'00 1"00 0-99 0"98 0-97 0"96 0"95 0"94 0"93 0-92 0-92 0"91 0"9l 0"91 0"90 0'90 0'90 0-90 0"90 0"90 0-90 0"90 L 1"00 0-98 0-97 0"95 0"94 0"93 0'92 0-91 0'90 0"89 0"89 0-88 0'88 0"88 0"88 0"88 0"88 0"89 0-89 0-90 0'90 G 1"00 0"97 0-94 0-91 0'88 0"86 0"83 0'8l 0"79 0-77 0"75 0"74 0'73 0"72 0'71 0'71 0"70 0"70 0"70 0-70 0'70 0"3 L 1"00 0"95 0-90 0"85 0'81 0'78 0"75 0'72 0'70 0'68 0"67 0"66 0"65 0"65 0'65 0'65 0"66 0'66 0"67 0"69 0-70 G 1"00 0-95 0-90 0"85 0'81 0"76 0-72 0"68 0-65 0"62 0-59 0-57 0-55 0-53 0-52 0"51 0-51 0"50 0'50 0"50 0'50 0"5 L 1"00 0"89 0'79 0"72 0"66 0"60 0"56 0"53 0-50 0-48 0"46 0"45 0"44 0"43 0'43 0"43 0"44 0"45 0"46 0'48 0'50 G 1"00 0"93 0"86 0"79 0"73 0"67 0'61 0"55 0-50 0'46 0"42 0"39 0'36 0"34 0'33 0'32 0"31 0'30 0"30 0'30 0"30 0"7 L 1"00 0-78 0"64 0"54 0"46 0"40 0"36 0-33 0-30 0-28 0"26 0"25 0"24 0"24 0'23 0'23 0"24 0'24 0"25 0-27 0"30 G 1"00 0-91 0-82 0"73 0"65 0"57 0-49 0"42 0-36 0"30 0"25 0"21 0'18 0-15 0"13 0-12 0"11 0"10 0'10 0"10 0"10 0"9 L
293
1"00 0"50 0"33 0"24 0"19 0-15 0"13 0"11 0-10 0"089 0"082 0"076 0"071 0'068 0-066 0-064 0-064 0-065 0-069 0-077 0-10
G, global (= net-section) collapse values of p; L, local (Kastner) collapse values of p; x, a/t = 1 - rl.
always be sufficiently large that failure is not caused by the hoop stress.
9.4.6
Miller 12 compared published J solutions for this geometry under tension loading with reference stress estimates. He concluded that net-section collapse gave better agreement than local collapse estimates did. The number of available results was limited, however.
294 1.0
A. G. Miller
o., ~
p
0.6 -
p= o
I0 o
20
0.4~ 02 ~
o. 0 0.o
30
40
'k
Fig. 70. Through-wall defect under combined bending and pressure. This is illustrated in Fig. 70. It reduces to the plain pipe Tresca solution at
/~=0:
Iml= cos(~)
It is a generalization of Sections 9.1.1 and 9.3.1. Unlike the SENT case in Section 2.4.1, the cracked result cannot be simply rewritten in terms of the m o m e n t referred to the centre-line, as the geometry is more complicated. The sign convention is that m and p are positive when they tend to open the crack. As in Section 9.2.1, it has been assumed that the defect cannot withstand a compressive stress. This may be unnecessarily pessimistic.
9.5.2
A lower bound expression is given by Kastner et al.: 95 [x/(x - / 3 ) ] P R 3 sin/~ [cos/3 + sin/~/(~ - 13)] + M af = (x _/~)2t + [~z - / ~ - 2 sin 2 fl/(n - fl) - sin 2 ~ / 2 ] R ' - t
xPR
This is a generalization of the equations in Sections 9.3.2 and 9.1.2, and is based on load to first yield.
9.5.3
These results apply to any end load if x R ' - P is replaced by the total axial force. (It is normally pessimistic to ignore the effect of the hoop stress.) Miller 94 reviewed published test results and concluded that the netsection collapse results in Section 9.5.1 were in reasonable agreement with them.. Computations of J for this geometry under combined bending and axial tension have been carried out by Yang and Palusamy ~7 and Cardinal et
295
both cases the reference stress derived from the net-section collapse formula gave better J estimates (though not always conservative) than did the reference stress derived from Kastner's expression. Therefore the net-section collapse expression given in Section 9.5.1 is recommended. 9.6 Surface circumferential defects under bending and pressure
9.6.1
(1 - q)/3 rt
2qsin-t n
m=qsin
rc(l+p)-(l ~q
q)fl
1 " +
The second pair of expressions apply when the neutral axis is in the defect. When part of the crack is in compression, it is probably unduly conservative to neglect its load-carrying capacity. For proportional loading in P and M, L r has to be determined numerically. This is a generalization of Sections 9.4.1, 9.2.1 and 9.5.1, when m, p and q are zero respectively.
9.6.2
Kastner et aL 95 state that the generalization of the result in Section 9.5.2 for load to first yield is unconservative. A lower bound expression for the local collapse load is given by Kastner et
a/.: 95
rc
2(1 - r/)sin fl ]
I= rc--/3(l-r/)~-~/[-~-Z~-I-Z
~]fP-~'TzRZtG-----~f
This is based on an elastic stress distribution, and the limit m o m e n t is independent of crack size in pure bending. It does not reduce to Kastner's through-crack result in Section 9.1.2, but it is a generalization of Section 9.4.2.
296
A. G. M i l l e r
9.6.3 Heaton 19 gives an approximate expression for an axisymmetric defect, assuming that the crack has no weakening effect in compressive regions. For proportional loading
L,=(I r/)p+__ 2------~ 4, t-~~ ) +
This reduces to the normal expression for pure tension in a cracked cylinder and for pure bending of an uncracked cylinder. These results apply to any end load if ~RZP is replaced by the total axial force. The crack must be large enough so that failure is not caused by the hoop stress.
9.6.4 Miller 94 reviewed published test results and concluded that they were in reasonable agreement with the net-section collapse results of Section 9.6.1. Therefore it is not recommended to use Heaton's expression.
9.7 Thick cylinders with extended circumferential defects under pressure
9.7.1 Chel156 proposed a formula for thick cylinders with axisymmetric defects. The crack is taken as being pressurized, and the stress is considered as being as uniform in the ligament. The same formulae apply for both plane strain and plane stress with ay increased by 2/~/3 for Mises plane strain:
internal flaw P = a~
F o
(ri+a)2 (ri + a) 2
- -
(r
- -
a)2 r~
- -
r2i
ro outer radius
These only apply when the crack is deep enough for the hoop stress not to be dominant. They are derived from considering the stress distribution in the plane of the defect only (i.e. net-section collapse). If the external pressure is not zero, then it is conservative to use the above formulae with P as the pressure difference. A better lower bound is given by
P,r~ - Por~
CT -~ y
r: - 4
where Pi, Po are internal and external pressure, and ri, ro are internal and external radii of ligament. This net-section collapse solution is not a complete lower bound solution as a complete stress field has not been determined. The net-section collapse approach does give a valid lower bound under axial tensile loading, however.
297
9.7.2
Ainsworth and Coleman t t o derived a complete lower bound solution for an axisymmetric external defect, using a Tresca yield criterion:
( r In ~
P=ln(ro-a~
tr--~r
P try P trr t R
ri /
+~[1-(
r, ')21
\ro -- a / I
2(t - a) R
In the shallow crack limit, it reduces to the standard thick cylinder result. These formulae give lower limit pressures than the net-section collapse formula, and are to be preferred as having a more accurate derivation. The deep crack solution is also valid for the Mises yield criterion. The Mises shallow crack solution will depend on the end conditions (see Section 8.4). 9.8 Thick cylinders with surface circumferential defects under combined bending and tension
9.8.1
For thick shells with different yield stresses in compression and tension, Kanninen et aL 96 give the expression derived from net-section collapse:
4ayR2t
=(1 --2()
(1 ~_~2
cos~t
2 = ay(compression)/try(tension)
= angle that neutral axis is away from the equator ct = 2(1 + 2) where F = end force. 1+ + ayRt-(il - O 2(1 + i)
298
A. G. Miller
For ~ =0, 2 = 1, this reduces to the thin shell expression above that in Section 9.6.1 for the case where the neutral axis is not in the defect (~ > ~/2 +/~).
9.8.2
The thick shell version of the 'first yield' formula for combined bending and tension is given by Julisch et al. ~t t On the basis of compatibility with the thin shell results in Section 9.6, it is recommended to use the net-section collapse expression given in Section 9.8.1. 10 S P H E R E S Burst pressure test results for these geometries have been reviewed by Miller. v7
e =-k-
af2t I (1 +
{8p-/icos- 4,)})
R = sphere radius
+ 1
This limit pressure is derived theoretically from the lower bound solution to the case where the defect has been replaced by a circular hole, with the defect as a diameter. It is shown in Fig. 71. The two-moment limited interaction yield surface was used. Burdekin and Taylor's results are also analysed by Dowling. ~3 R6 Supplement 1 (1979) considered the tests of Lebey and Roche. ~~4. ~t 5 Miller 77 showed that the Kiefer expression for axial-crack cylinders (see Section 8.1.2) gave a better (and less conservative) fit to the data. It was unconservative for all the Lr-dominated Burdekin and Taylor tests using the Rev. 2 version of R6, but most of this non-conservatism was removed using the strain hardening version of R6. In terms of the stress intensity factor, or the elastic stiffness, a meridional crack in a sphere is very similar to an axial crack in a cylinder, given the same membrane stress and curvature normal to the crack. Therefore, analogously to the cylinder case, it is recommended to
299
0 Fig. 71.
1.'0
4'0
2o'ft
1 (I + 1"61p2) t/2
Miller tt6 considered this geometry both experimentally and theoretically. The material was mild steel. For short defects the experimental failure pressures are adequately explained by a limit pressure expression given by ~rr2t [2(1 -- r/) ] P =--R-- L r/+ (1 + {8p2/(1 - q)}),/2 + 1
.,,.I
c
p =- ( R t ) l / 2 r1 - b / t
2c = defect length
The experiments were done for defects on circles of latitude. The limit pressure was derived theoretically from a lower b o u n d combination of the plain m e m b r a n e solution, and a shallow shell approximation to limit pressure for a through-thickness meridional defect given in Section 10.1. It is suggested that it may be applied to defects on either great circles or small circles with the proviso that the small circles must be sufficiently short. In the absence of evidence, a criterion for small circle defects would be that this prediction was valid, provided that it was greater than the value given by the solution for complete small circle defects in Section 10.3.
300
A. G. Miller
10.2.2 An alternative failure expression, which is in equally good agreement with the test results, is given by the analyses of the Battelle cylinder expression of Section 8.2.3. It may be regarded as a local collapse expression.
P = ---R-- 1 - (1 - 11)/{(1 + 1"05p2) l/z} The remarks made about the cylinder analogy in Section 10.1 also apply here.
PR 2aft
PR
10.2.4 The expression in Section 10.2.1 is recommended as the global collapse solution, and that of Section 10.2.2 is recommended as the local collapse solution. The distinction is discussed in Section 1.8.
Axis of
symmetry
\q
301
10.3.1
Goodall and Griffiths t ~7 considered this geometry both experimentally and theoretically (Fig. 72). The material was mild steel. The experimental failure pressures are adequately explained by a limit pressure expression given by
q--
The limit solution was determined numerically from a lower bound analysis, using the two-moment limited interaction criterion. A lower bound is always
1.0
0.7
~'
\\\ -.;,\\
O J,
~ ' ~
~"
~'~'
0.3
Asymptote
as jo ---m--co 21.0
~ ~ - - - ~ - ~ . ~
I 4.0
i 1.0
,1.0
~1.0
Fig. 73.
P Thcorctical limit prcssure for sphere with axlsymmctric defect (Goodal] and Griffiths ~t ~) (q = 0-3). - - , Crack insidc: - - - , crack outside.
302
A. G. ,Wilier
l.O
L_.. O
:
0.9
0.$
0.7
0.6
_--- = u . o a
~x-,,
-,~
0.5 Asymptote
b osjo
I
--4-- co
o!,
Fig. 74.
o.~
o.s ,Io
21o
,.'.o
s!o
~'o
Theoretical limit pressure for spher e with axisymmetric defect (Goodall and Griffiths t t ' ) (q = 0"51. - - - - , Crack inside; - - - , crack outsidc.
given b y p = ~l. For small p the limit pressure is independent o f p and is given by p=min At large p
p=q+
{(
q I-~ 4tan-'q5
where . f = l when - i f z +2~r/(1 = g ) > 0 . / ' = ] when - q 2 + 2 ~ r / ( 1 - q ) < 0 Both the small p and large p expressions are the asymptotic forms of the lower bound expression. It was found that a u gave better agreement with the experimental results than did af.
10.3.2 Ewing 44 has shown that the ligament yield criterion for combined shear and tension used by Goodall and Griffiths ~~v is optimistic by up to 17% and derived a more refined yield criterion. His results are illustrated in Fig. 75. In shear one should use true stress-strain relationships in conjunction with an instability criterion, as necking does not occur. The important thing is comparison with experiment. A similar objection may be made against the ligament bending yield criterion used by Goodall and Griffiths, but no modified version is available.
303
O.S
j , , , ,
L/R=0.4
"~
0.5
\
I I l l I I
I I
0.5
alt
O.S
Fig. 75. Comparison of plastic collapse pressures with pressurized hemispherical shells of various geometries (R/t = 25. various L/R ratios). ----. Rigorous upper bound; , , rigorous lower bounds; - - - , limited interaction shallow shell solution; , l'-7,experimental rupture pressures, flow stress correlated; , fully circumferential cracks (Goodall and Griffiths~tV); F-l, part circumferential cracks 132% circumference)(Miller~,6). (A review o f c o m b i n e d b e n d i n g a n d shear yield criteria is given by R o b i n s o n ~~a for defect-free shells, but the yield criterion at a c r a c k e d section will be different.)
II P I P E B E N D S W I T H L O N G I T U D I N A L CIRCUMFERENTIAL DEFECTS
AND
T h e loadings c o n s i d e r e d are internal pressure and in-plane bending. Test results were reviewed by Miller) t9 T h e r e is little validation, so the results should be treated with caution.
304
A. G. Milh'r
I
Fig. 76. Loading.
Circumferential di
thickness (t)
Longitudinaldirection
Fig. 77. Geometry of smooth pipe bend. T h e g e o m e t r y is s h o w n in Figs 76 a n d 77. r = tube radius R = bend radius t = thickness
). = R t / r 2
Pressure
( G o o d a l l 120)
305
'~"
0.6
.,
E E
0
u
0.5
0.4
0.3
E
0 Z
o.2
0.1
0.0
I 0.!
i 02
0.3
0.4
I 0.5
geometry
porometer : k
This is the asymptotic solution as ).--. 0 for Tresca and limited interaction yield criteria. 11.1.2 Bending Mo 4r2taf _ 0.94)2/3 (Calladine 12t)
This is also an asymptotic solution, valid for ). <0"5, for the Mises criterion. The limit moment is shown in Fig. 78.
11.2 Penetrating longitudinal defects under pressure
11.2.1 Defect at crown or extrados. The cylinder solution of Section 8.1 may be used: ' t 9 Pr art 1 (1 + 1-61p2) z/2
306
A.G. Miller
11.2.2
Defect at intrados:
Pr 1 1 - r/R
r/2R
(Miller I t 9)
11.3 Penetrating longitudinal defects under bending For an extended defect at longitude ~b (see Fig. 79)
0.1<;.<0-5
0.|
O~
//0/~
m
/E
0.6
/t
0.4
0.2
oJ/
Longitudinal through crack
1
O"
1 I
210 *
6 0
810
1 O0
~.-_L
Fig. 79.
Longitudinal through crack: effect on limit load o f pipe bend in bending (Griffithst 22).
307
These formulae are fitted to the numerical results of Griffiths, 122 shown in Fig. 79. Griffiths used the Tresca yield criterion. Test results show that this expression is conservative.t t 9
rib,
b 1.0 m
0.5
I 0.5
! l.O
n Fig. 80. Effect of longitudinal crack penetration on limit moment of pipe bend (Griffiths 122). Note: These results are independent of 2. q~= 0 (worst case).
308
A. G. Miller
I!
~..~
.~ 6
e-, 0
"5 _
I ,4'
0 o
e4
~g
u~ 0 u
/
/
o o
O
e~
/
%
E
O
E E
e-, o
.,
O ii
L5
I
o I o e~ o
r~
309
Pr
Pr =1 2art
rc
where Mo is the expression for the uncracked bend in Section 11.0. In general, a lower bound is given by M (~) Mo = cos sinfl 2 (seeSection9.1)
12 C Y L I N D E R - C Y L I N D E R
INTERSECTION
12.1 Approximations
12.l.l
If the nozzle has been well designed, with suitable reinforcement, the nozzle should not weaken the structure, and the defect-free structure may be taken
310
,4. G. Miller
Te
11 ---
Nozzle
-.-
"
J'
\
Fig. 83. Geometry of c.vlinder-c~linder intersection.
to be approximately a plain cylinder. This approach was used, for example, by Milne ~z3 when analysing crotch corner defects.
12.1.2
Alternatively, a conservative estimate may be made by using the detect-free results, with the thickness reduced to the ligament thickness. Reviews of limit loads of defect-free nozzles in cylinders are given by Billington et al. ~2"~ for tension and compression, in-plane and out-of-plane bending, and Robinson 1_,5.126 for internal pressure.
1.0 0.9
0.8
,p
tt T
Rt T
1.0
~ _ . ~ /
! O. 5 O
0.7
0.6
100
_ ~ ~
0.1
"q
Fig. 84.
Limit pressure of cylinder-cylinder intersection. R T = 100. (Straight lines have been drawn between the computed points.)
311
do .
~
tl T
!.0 0.50 0.25
RI T
0.7
0.6
0.5 O.t, 0.3
1.4
50
2.8
0.50 0.25
0.2
0.1
0.1
' 0.4
i 05
' 0.6
i 0.7
i 08
i 09
Fig. 85.
L i m i t pressure o f
cylinder-cylinder
R/T= 50.
12.1.3 A common approximation is to replace the main cylinder by a sphere with double the radius.
RI T
.7
! 25
P
.5 .4
.3 .2 .I 0 I .1
I .2 I .3 l .4 | .5 .6 I .7 i l 8 f .S 10
0.50 0.25
Fig. 86.
R/T= 25.
312
A. G. Miller
R t
R
0-1 0-2 0"4 0. I 0'2 0.4 0.1 0-2 0"4 0"1 0"2 0"4 0-1 0"2 0-4 0-1 0"2 0"4 0"1 0"2 0"4 0'1 0"2 0'4 0"1 0"2 0-4
7
0'25 0"25 0'25 0-50 0"50 0"50 1.00 1"00 1'00 0"25 0-25 0"25 0'50 0"50 0"50 1"00 1-00 1-00 0'25 0-25 0'25 0"50 0"50 0-50 1.00 1"00 1"00
T
25"0 25"0 25"0 25"0 25"0 25.0 25'0 25"0 25-0 50"0 50"0 50"0 50"0 50"0 50'0 50-0 50"0 50"0 100"0 100-0 100"0 100"0 100'0 100"0 100"0 100"0 100"0
(,=0.1)
0'827 0"516 0"249 0.807 a 0"549 0"284 0-830 0"573 0"341 0"726 0"454 0'224 0"769 0'478 0"258 0"788 0-521 0"302 0"653 0'359 0"194 0"661 0"395 0-208 0"688 0"423 0'266
1,7=0-31
0-828 0"559 0"283 0.810 ~ 0'606 0-345 0"856 0"683 0"480 0'749 0.471 0-247 0-789 0-519 0"285 0"806 0"608 0.394 0-668 0-373 0-200 0-696 0.411 0.221 0-744 0.494 0-308
0-5 I'0 2"0 0'5 I'0 2"0 0"5 1'0 2"0 0"71 1'41 2"83 0-71 1'41 2'83 0"71 1.41 2"83 I 2 4 1 2 4 1 2 4
0-835 0.571 0'289 0.824 ~ 0'629 0"358 0-862 0.747 0-518 0.787 0.487 0.261 0-796 0.542 0"303 0'850 0.664 0-420 0"675 0.376 0-214 0"721 0.435 0"240 0'808 0"546 0"323
0"841 0"584 0"289 0"859 0"635 0"355 0"919 0-754 0'526 0"790 0.499 0"268 0"804 0"553 0"316 0"865 0"673 0'439 0"697 0-381 0-227 0'736 0"442 0"259 0.814 0"563 0"343
p = PR/a~T, where P = limit pressure (lower bound). q = T'/T. "Better to take value at I/T=O.25.
Mises yield criterion have been calculated numerically by Robinson (pers. comm.). The method used was that of Meng. ~'" These results are shown in Tables 16 and 17, and Figs 84-86. The defects have little effect unless they are very deep (q < 0-3). It makes little difference whether the crack is internal or external, and the sign of the difference between the two varies with geometry. Comparison of these results with the axisymmetric approximation of that in Section 12.1.3 shows that the approximation gives non-conservative values for the limit pressure.
313
p(q = 0.3)
p(q = 0.6)
T'/T.
Values o f p in brackets are for external cracks taken from Table 16.
13 S P H E R E - N O Z Z L E I N T E R S E C T I O N The geometry considered is shown in Fig. 87. Only radial nozzles are considered. Theoretical and experimental results have been reviewed by
Miller. 128 13.1 Limit pressure
13.1.1
The results calculated by the most accurate method are those by Lim. t-'9 They were calculated by non-linear optimization of polynomial stress resultant fields. The yield criterion was that of Ilyushin, as modified by
Axialt h r u s t
Thickness t i
j..-Assumed
p o s i t i o n of d e f e c t t h i c k n e s s 1It = b
/ P e su e
t
Thickness
Radius
Fig. 87.
314
1
A. G. Miller
!
P
0.8 0.8
o.6
0.6
0.4
0.4
0.2
- " " - - - 0 . 1 0
0.2
, 0.20
, 0.30
O.0 0.00
, 0.10
L 0.20
, 0.30
, 0.40 rlR
'1
08 [
0.6
0.6
0.4
0.4
O.Z ~
0.2
11"00.25
0.( 0.00
~ 0.10
~ 0.20
0.30
O.LO rlR
0.0 0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40 rlR
Fig. 88.
Robinson to allow for shear stresses. The results are shown for a wide range of geometries in Figs 88-91. r = nozzle radius R = sphere radius p = PR/2cyrt t = nozzle thickness T = sphere thickness t i T = ligament thickness
13.1.2 For geometries not covered by these results, a P P C L I B program may be used. ~3 This gives four solutions: lower and upper bounds appropriate for
315
P
I 0.8
P
0.8
0.(
0.6
0.4
o,
0.2
~
~ 0
\
0.25 0.2
1 0
~ 0 . 1 0
tOO
i 0.20
, 0.30
,0.001 0.40
o.c 0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40 r/R
rlR
1 RIT= 50.0
1
p
0.8
0.8
0.6
0.6
0.4
?oo
O.t,
-q
0.2 ~ O A O
0.2 ~ . ~ o
o 0. v . 0 0
0.0
'
0 . '1 0
020 '
0.30 '
0.'t..O
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
rlR
0.40 r/R
Fig. 89.
small r/R (< 0"3), and lower and upper bounds appropriate for large r/R (> 0"3). No allowance is made for nozzle yielding. The program gives the values of the stress resultants at the vessel intersection. These should be checked against nozzle yielding by the method given in Miller. 129 If the nozzle yield criterion is violated, then the limit pressure should be reduced by the appropriate factor.
316
R/T =25.0
A. G. Miller
R/T =75.0
P
O.B
0.6 ~
O.G
O.G
0.4
0.4
0.2
0.(
t0001
O.C
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40 r/R
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40 rlR
t P
0.8
R/T=
100.
P
0.6
O.G
0.6
.q
0.4 0.4
t.00
0,2
0.2 ~
0.0
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40 r/R
0.0 0.00
. 0.10
. 0.20
. 0.30
0.40 rlR
Fig. 90.
L i m i t pressure o f p r o t r u d i n g nozzles,
t,/T= 0.75.
The two solutions have been shown to agree reasonably with each other and with test results.
13.1.3 Lim's results are for external axisymmetric defects at the intersection, and with cylindrical nozzles. Miller considers variants on this geometry:
(i) Flush nozzles--these may be considered by PPCL1 B, with allowance for nozzle yielding as before.
317
~\
RI T =75.0
0.11
0.5
oo o:,o
0.t0
O.G
O.t.
0.~
0.2
0.2
O.C
'
'
'
'
0.00
o.10 020
0 . 3 0 0.~0 r/R
RIT=IO0.O
P
0.8 0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
!
t * * i
0.6
0.t,
0.2
o12
0.0
0.00
0.10 0.20
0.30
O.t,O rlR
O.ZO 0.30
0.t.O r/R
Fig. 91.
(ii) Finite defect width---this may have a large effect, even for widths less than the sphere thickness. For large width/thickness ratios, the results tend to a constant pressure, which may be less than that given by the sphere membrane solution. (iii) If the defect radius is greater than the nozzle radius, the effect depends on the collapse mechanism. For thin ligaments, ligament yielding dominates and the defect radius controls the limit pressure.
318
A. G. Miller
(iv)
(v)
(vi) (vii)
For thick ligaments, vessel yielding dominates and the nozzle radius controls the limit pressure. The solutions quoted do not allow for the weld profile. The beneficial effects of the fillets may be allowed for approximately by a method due to Ewing (given in Miller12S), which gives an effective ligament thickness for use in the above solutions, calculated in terms of the fillet weld's geometrical parameters. Internal defects--these are less deleterious than external defects, the maximum difference being in the intermediate ligament thickness r6gime. Part-circumference defects--there is only a very small number of test results available for this and general conclusions cannot be drawn. Conical nozzles--these have a higher limit pressure than the corresponding cylindrical nozzles. The limit pressure is non-zero even for zero ligament. If frictional effects are included the difference
la_ II /"
0.2
0..' p =r
0.6 14"T~
08
T.2
Fig. 92. L o w e r b o u n d collapse loads, ignoring shear. Mo = err 2 ,'4 collapse m o m e n t o f plain shell; F o = 2 r i M o = collapse load o f plate under point load; Q, experiment (flow stress correlated), untracked case.
319
is even greater. Ewing has written a program (PPCL02) which gives an upper bound.
13.2 Limit thrust
13.2.1
The solutions for this are also calculated by Ewing's program (PPCLIB), which gives the equivalent four solutions as in Section 13.1.2. For defect-free vessels the results agree well with test results. This comparison and general results are shown in Fig. 92.
13.2.2
A bending moment M applied to the nozzle may be allowed for pessimistically by replacing it by an equivalent thrust Fe:
Fo=
13.2.3
2M
r
Combined thrust F and bending moment M may be treated conservatively by linear addition, i.e.
Ftot~ I = F + F~
13.2.4
14 CONCLUSIONS Limit load solutions have been given for the following structures with defects (listed by section number): 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Single-edge notched plates under tension, bending and shear. Internal notches in plates under tension, bending and shear. Double-edge notched plates under tension, bending and shear. Short surface defects in plates under tension and bending. Axisymmetric notches in round bars under tension and torsion. Chordal cracks in round bars under bending and torsion. General shell structures. Cylinders with surface and penetrating axial defects under pressure. Cylinders with surface and penetrating circumferential defects under bending and/or pressure. Spheres with short penetrating defects, axisymmetric surface defects and short surface defects under pressure.
320
.4. G. Milh'r
11. Pipe bends with longitudinal and circumferential, surface defects under in-plane bending or internal 12. Cylinder-cylinder intersections with a defect at under internal pressure. 13. Sphere with a penetrating cylindrical or conical axisymmetric surface defect at the intersection, pressure and axial thrust.
Comparison with experimental results has been made. These solutions assist in performing two-criteria assessments of structural integrity.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT This paper is published with the permission of the Central Electricity Generating Board.
REFERENCES 1. Milne, I., Ainsworth, R. A., Dowling, A. R. and Stewart, A. T., R H/R6-Rev. 3, Assessnwnt of the Integrity of Structures Containing Defects. CEGB, UK, 1986. 2. Ainsworth, R. A., TPRD/B/0175/N83, The Assessment of Defects in Str,wtures o Strain Harden htg Material, C EG B, U K, 1983. J" 3. Ainsworth, R. A., Engng Fract. Mech., 19 (1984), 633-42. 4. Ainsworth, R. A. and Goodall, I. W., TPRD/B/0137/N82, Defect Assessments at Elevated Temperature, CEGB, UK, 1982. 5. Ainsworth, R. A., Chell, G. G., Coleman, M. C., Goodall, I. W., Gooch, D. J., Haigh, J. R., Kimmins, S. "I".and Neate, G. J., TPRD/B/0784/R86, Assessment Proce&trefor Defects in Plant Operating in the Creep Range, CEGB, UK, 1986. 6. ASME, Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, Section III: N,wlear Power Plant Components Division 1, 1986. 7. Gerdeen, J. C., WRC Bulletin 254, A Critical Evaluation of Plastic Behaciour Data and a Unified Definition of Plastic Loads Jbr Pressure Components. Welding Research Council, New York, 1979. 8. Hodge, P. G., Limit Analysis oJ" Rotationally Symmetric Plates and Shells. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1963. 9. Miller, A. G., TPRD/B/0716/N85, Ductile Fracture of Ligaments at Part Penetration Defects, CEGB, UK, 1985. 10. Ewing, D. J. F., TPRD/L/2692/N84, On the Mode III Faihtre of a Long Submerged Defect, 1984. (See also Int. J. Pres. Ves. and Piping, 24 (1986), 209-37.) t 1. Bradford, R., SWR/SSD/0710/N86, Calculation of Fracture Parameters for 3Dbnensional Surface Cracks attd A rbitra O' Hardening Behaviour, CEG B, U K, 1986.
321
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322
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71. Akhurst, K. N. and Ewing, D. J. F., TPRD/L/MT0010/M82, The Failure Assessment of a Shaft Containing a Chordal Crack, CEGB, UK, 1982. 72. Bicknell, M. B. and Ruiz, C., Pressure Vessel Design and Analysis, Macmillan, London, 1967. 73. Ewing, D. J. F., TPRD/L/MT0038/82, On the Plastic Limit Analysis of Boiler Shells, CEGB, UK, 1982. 74. Ewing, D. J. E, TPRD/L/2566/N83, On the Plastic Collapse of a Thin-walled Pressurised Pipe with an Axial Crack, CEGB, UK, 1983. 75. Miller, A. G., TPRD/B/0093/N82, Review of Limit Loads of Structures Containing Defects, CEGB, UK, 1982. 76. Goodall, I. W., Some observations on fracture mechanics assessment of pressure vessel components, in Proc. 3rd bit. Conf. on Numerical Methods in Fracture, Swansea, 1984 (A. R. Luxmoore and D. R. J. Owen, eds), Pineridge Press, Swansea, 1984, pp. 275-322. 77. Miller, A. G., TPRD/B/0489/N84, Ret'iew of Test Results for Ductile Failure Pressure of Cracked Spherical and Cylindrical Pressure Vessels, CEGB, UK, 1984. 78. Darlaston, B. J. L. and Harrison, R. P., The ductile failure ofthin-walled pipes with defects under combination of internal pressure and bending, in Third ICPVT, Tokyo, Part IL 1977, pp. 669-76 (or SMiRT IV Paper F8 4). 79. Kitching, R., Davis, J. K. and Gill, S. S., Limit pressures for cylindrical shells with unreinforced openings of various shapes, J. Mech. Eng. Sci.. 12 (1970). 313-30. 80. Kiefner, J. F., Maxey, W. A., Eiber, R. J. and Duffy, A. R., Failure stress levels of flaws in pressurised cylinders, in Progress in Flaw Growth and Fracture Toughness Testing, ASTM STP 536, 1973, pp. 461-81. 81. Folias, E. S., An axial crack in a pressurised cylindrical shell, hit. J. Fract. Mech., 1 (1965), 104-13. 82. Folias, E. S., On the fracture of nuclear reactor tubes, SMiRT1HLondon, 1975. Paper C4/5. 83. Ruiz, C., Ductile growth of a longitudinal flaw in a cylindrical shell under internal pressure, bit. J. Mech. Sci., 20 (1978), 277-81. 84. Chell, G. G., TPRD/L/MT0237/M84, ADISC: A Computer Program for Assessblg Defects hi Spheres and Cylinders, CEGB, UK, 1984. 85. Kitching, R. and Zarrabi, K., Lower bound to limit pressure for cylindrical shell with part-through slot, Int. J. Mech. Sci., 23 (1981), 31-48. 86. Kitching, R. and Zarrabi, K., Limit and burst pressure for cylindrical shells with part-through slots, htt. J. Pres. Ves. and Piping, 10 (1982), 235-70. 87. Baker, E. H., Kovalevsky, L. and Rish, F. L., Structural Anah'sis of Shells, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1972. 88. Griffiths, J. E., NER/SSD/R440, The Limit Analysis of Header Geometries for Application in Remanent Creep Life Assessments, CEGB, UK, 1981. 89. Proctor, M. W., NER/SSD/R/0535/84, A Ret'iew of Relevant Literature and a Proposed Test Programme to Int'estigate the Plastic Collapse of Header Geometries, CEGB, UK, 1984. 90. Wilson, J. D. and Griffiths, J. E., NER/SSD/R/0529/84, The Plastic Behaviour of Perforated Thick-walled Cylindrical Pressure Vessels with Interacting Penetrations, CEGB, UK, 1984. 91. Kitching, R., Akwari, A. O. and Sanderson, N., Limit pressures for cylindrical shells with two adjacent circular cut-outs, hTt. J. Mech. Sci., 15 (1973), 821-3 I.
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92. Miller, A. G., TPRD/B/0177/N82, Limit Pressure of Cylinder with a Twodimensional Array of Nozzles and Associated Defects, CEGB, UK, 1982. 93. Miller, A. G., Limit pressure of cylinder with a two-dimensional array of nozzles, and associated defects, Int. J. Mech. Sci., 27 (1985), 105-15. 94. Miller, A. G., TPRD/B/0725/N85, The Fracture of Cylinders with Defects under Bending and Combined Bending and Pressure, CEGB, UK, 1985. 95. Kastner, W., Roehrich, E., Schmitt, W. and Steinbuch, R., Critical crack sizes in ductile piping, Int. J. Pres. Ves. and Piping, 9 (1981), 197-219. 96. Kanninen, M F., Zahoor, A., Wilkowski, G., Abou-Sayed, I., Marschall, C., Broek, D., Sampath, S., Rhee, H. and Ahmad, J., EPRI NP-2347, Vols 1 and 2: Instability predictions for circumferentially cracked type 304 stainless steel pipes under dynamic loading, EPRI, USA, 1982. 97. Wilkowski, G. M. and Eiber, R. J., Evaluation of tensile failure of girth weld repair grooves in pipe subjected to offshore laying stresses, J. Energy Resources Technology, 103 (1981), 48-55. 98. Grunmach, R., Ausbreitung yon Umfangsrissen in Rohren unter Vierpunktbiegebelastung, Dr-lng. Dissertation, Karlsruhe University, 1986. 99. Willoughby, A. A., WI Report 191/1982, A Survey of Plastic Collapse Solutions used in the Failure Assessment of Partwall Defects, Welding Institute Report, Cambridge, 1982. 100. Glover, A. G., Coote, R. I. and Pick, R. J., Engineering critical assessment of pipeline girth welds, in Welding Institute Conf on Fitness-jbr-Purpose, 25-28 November t981, London. 101. Wilkowski, G. M. and Eiber, R. J., Reuiew of Fracture Mechanics Approaches to D~.,fining Critical Size Girth Weht Discontinuities, WRC Bulletin 239, 1978. 102. Ranta-Maunus, A. K. and Achenbach, J. D., Stability of circumferential through cracks in ductile pipes, Nuclear Engineering and Design, 60 (1980), 33945. 103. Kanninen, M. F., Broek, D., Marschall, C. W., Rybicki, E. F., Sampath, S. G., Simonen, F. A. and Wilkowski, G. M., EPRI NP-192, Mechanical Fracture Predictions for Sensitized StahTless Steel Piping with Circumferential Cracks, EPRI, USA, 1976. 104. Schulze, H. D., Togler, G. and Bodmann, E., Fracture mechanics analysis on the initiation and propagation of circumferential and longitudinal defects in straight pipes and pipe bends, Nuclear Engineering and Design, 58 (1980), 19-31. 105. Eiber, R. J., Maxey, W. A.I Duffy, A. R. and Atterbury, J. J., Investigation of the Initiation and Extent of Ductile Pipe Rupture, Battelle Memorial Institute Report, No. 1908, 1971. 106. Marston, T. U. and Norris, D. M., ASME, Section XI: Proposed acceptance criteria for circumferential flaws in stainless steel piping, in Proc. Cot!f. Fitnessfor-Purpose Vali~kttion qf Welded Constructions, London, 1981, Paper 40, 1982. 107. Yang, C. Y. and Palusamy, S. S., VCE method of J determination for a pressurized pipe under bending, J. Pressure Vessel Technology, 105 (1983), 16-22. 108. Cardinal, J. W., Polch, E. Z., Nair, P. K. and Kanninen, M. F., Elastic-plastic finite-element analysis of a circumferentially cracked pipe, in Proc. CSNI/ NRC Workshop on Ductile Piping Fracture Mechanics, NRC, Washington, 1984.
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