Affiliation:
1. University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
2. Serco Assurance, Warrington, Cheshire, UK
Abstract
It is recognised that the driving force for the initiation and propagation of defects in materials may, under some circumstances, include contributions from both externally applied loads such as internal pressure in pressure vessels and piping and secondary stresses such as weld residual stresses. For non stress-relieved welds, residual stresses can provide a significant proportion of the crack driving force. This paper describes the results obtained from an experimental programme aimed at extending the understanding of residual stress effects on cleavage fracture. The paper describes the preparation and testing of standard and preloaded compact-tension specimens of an A533B pressure vessel steel at its Master Curve reference temperature. Standard tests on compact-tension specimens provide fracture toughness data which are broadly consistent with the conventional three-parameter Weibull model, with Kmin = 20 MPa√m and an exponent of about 4. The preloaded compact-tension specimens included a high level of tensile residual stress at the crack location. Fracture toughness data obtained using the test standards from these specimens fall significantly below the standard specimen data, since the contribution from residual stresses is ignored. However, when due account is taken of the residual stress on the crack driving force using a correct definition of the J-integral, the distributions of fracture toughness data from both specimen types are found to overlay each other. The definition of J used in this paper allows residual stress effects on fracture to be accounted for in a single fracture parameter.
Cited by
1 articles.
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