Notch stress concepts for the fatigue assessment of welded joints - Background and applications

被引:188
|
作者
Sonsino, C. M. [1 ]
Fricke, W. [2 ]
de Bruyne, F. [3 ]
Hoppe, A. [3 ]
Ahmadi, A. [4 ]
Zhang, G. [4 ]
机构
[1] LBF, Fraunhofer Inst Struct Durabil & Syst Reliabil, Darmstadt, Germany
[2] Hamburg Univ Technol, Hamburg, Germany
[3] AUDI AG, Ingolstadt, Germany
[4] Volkswagen AG, Wolfsburg, Germany
关键词
Notch stress concept; Welded joints; Reference radius; Thickness; PREDICTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2010.04.011
中图分类号
TH [机械、仪表工业];
学科分类号
0802 ;
摘要
Among modern fatigue design concepts for welded structures, the linear-elastic notch stress concept gains increasing industrial acceptance. There are two variants of this concept, one for thick walled (t >= 5 mm) welded joints with the reference radius r(ref) = 1.00 mm, which is already included in the fatigue design recommendations of the IIW and applied for the assessment of big welded structures, and one for thin walled (t < 5 mm) welded joints with the reference radius r(ref) = 0.05 mm, which is more and more used in the automotive industry. The concept with r(ref) = 1.00 mm is based on the micro-support theory of Neuber with the fictitious radius r(ref) = 1.00 mm, derived by Radaj. The background of the concept with r(ref) = 0.05 mm is the relationship between the stress-intensity factor and the notch stress according to Creager and Paris as well as Irvin's theory of crack blunting. Besides these two theories, the definition of both of these radii has also an experimental background; they are observed in many welded joints. In the present paper, first the background and then different applications of both concept variants are described: the application of the reference radius of r(ref) = 1.00 mm for MAG-welded offshore K-nodes (t = 30 mm) and sandwich panels for ship decks (t = 5 mm), and the application of r(ref) = 0.05 mm for spot-welded automotive doors (t = 1 mm) and MAG-welded automotive trailing links (t = 3-4 mm). The sandwich panels were evaluated additionally with r(ref) = 0.05 mm. Calculations and experimental results are compared and the reliability of the notch stress concept variants underlined. Additionally, recommendations for the slope of design lines distinguishing between thin and thick dimensions are given, i.e. k = 3.0 and 5.0 (normal stress, shear stress) for thick and stiff structures, k = 5.0 and 7.0 for thin and flexible structures. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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页码:2 / 16
页数:15
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