| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4922628 | International Journal of Solids and Structures | 2017 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Residual stress measurements have been made in a range of electron beam welded samples to study how the weld induced residual stresses redistributed during fabrication of compact tension, C(T), specimens. The samples were manufactured from Type 316H stainless steel in the ex-service material condition and in material which had been preconditioned by inducing 8% plastic strain. Measurements made using neutron diffraction, slitting and the contour method were generally in good agreement and showed residual stress components of up to three times the base material's yield strength existed in the samples. When sectioning a sample to perform the contour method, large elastic deformations occurred at the cut tip due to the large residual stresses present. A correction was applied to the measured surface displacements to account for this deformation. Neutron diffraction measurements were made at various stages of the fabrication process, which showed significant stress redistribution occurred as the welded samples were machined into C(T) specimens. However the tensile stresses near the crack tip of the C(T) specimens remained large and could significantly influence subsequent crack growth tests.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
Priyesh Kapadia, Catrin Davies, Thilo Pirling, Michael Hofmann, Robert Wimpory, Foroogh Hosseinzadeh, David Dean, Kamran Nikbin,
