Affiliation:
1. National Physical Laboratory
2. Stresscraft Ltd.
Abstract
The measurement of residual stress using the incremental hole drilling is well established, but the
main limitations with the conventional strain gauge approach are the requirements for surface
preparation, the need for accurate alignment and drilling, the restricted range of hole geometries
commensurate with the specific gauge designs, and the limited range of strain data averaged over
the footprint of the strain gauge grid. Recent attempts to extend the method have seen the
application of full field optical techniques such as electronic speckle pattern interferometry and
holographic interferometry for measuring the strain fields around the hole, but these methods are
sensitive to vibration and this limits their practical use to controlled laboratory environments.
There are significant potential benefits therefore of using a more robust technique based on Digital
Image Correlation (DIC), and work is presented in this study on the development of the method for
measuring surface displacements and strain fields generated during incremental hole drilling. Some
of the practical issues associated with the technique development, including the optimization of
applied patterns, the development of the optical system and integration with current hole drilling
equipment are discussed, and although measurements are only presented for a single load case - the
equi-biaxial stress state introduced during shot peening - the novel aspect of this work is the
integration of DIC measurements with incremental drilling and an application of the Integral
Method analysis to measure the variation of residual stress with depth. Validation data comparing
results from conventional strain gauge data and FE models is also presented.
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.
Cited by
69 articles.
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