PSI - Issue 1

S.M.O. Tavares et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 1 (2016) 173–180 Author name / Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2016) 000 – 000

176

4

ridge observed, the crack path should tend to a plane perpendicular to the cylinder axis, and this is fully consistent with the observed crack surface, Figure 1.

3. Analysis based on the Soderberg fatigue criterion

The approach follows typical machine design textbook presentation, eg Childs (2004). Tensile testing gave steel rupture and yield stresses of 830 MPa and 621 MPa respectively. The shoulder fillet radius in the fractured rod is approximately 1mm. Theoretical stress concentration factor K t obtained in ABAQUS for 1mm radius is K t =6.6. Hardness is 251 HBW. Notch sensitivity index q , a function of (i) the steel and its hardness, and (ii) of K t , is estimated in this case as q= 0.5. Practical stress concentration factor (also called ‘fatigue stress concentration factor’) is therefore:   1 1 3.8 f t K q K     (1) Surface quality effect is a function of the rupture strength of the material, and of the manufacturing process, in this case machining; it is estimated as C =0.7. Size effect typically associated to stress gradients resulting from bending (or torsion), was not considered; however, a reduction of yield and rupture stresses due to the large diameter is foreseen in steel suppliers data. Fatigue limit under R =-1 is assumed to be half of the rupture strength. However that relationship holds for normal stress resulting from bending moment. If, as in the present case, normal stress results from axial loading, the fatigue strength value should be corrected by the multiplying factor 0.8. The approach based on the Soderberg diagram, not taking into account the necessary safety factor, ie assuming N =1,

f a K    

(2)

1

m  

c f

yield

0

min max R         0 a m

  

     

 

3.8

max

max

3.8 1

2

2

2 1 

 

  

(3)

1     

111.3MPa

 

max

max

3.8 1

415 0.7 0.8 621  

2 232.4 621 

  

 

 

232.4 621

implying a maximum load of 913 ton. This is a result of considering axial effort only, and not considering the necessary safety factor ( ie , in the above calculation safety factor is N =1). Axial loading only is considered, since eventual bending effects were considered small. A study of the crack surface reveals that the fatigue crack is not precisely axisymmetric, suggesting that some bending load was present during the crack propagation. Details of this analysis are given in Figures 12 to 14. In particular, the analysis performed on Figure 12 revealed that the hollow cylinder is not precisely concentric. SOLIDWORKS software was used for the estimation of the areas corresponding to fatigue and to final rupture, Figures 13 and 14 respectively. As simplifying assumptions, no reference was made to eventual bending effects, or to eventual oil pressure effects, both of which could further decrease the load capacity of the rod. For this type of calculation a safety factor N greater than 2 is advisable. Using N =2 this study indicates that the failed rod could be submitted to cyclic loading with R =0 and maximum load of the order of 450 ton, far below the levels of loading that according to the owner of the machine were applied. Given the strong evidence that the cause of the failure is the inadequate design of the shoulder fillet radius, the more detailed DIN 743 was not necessary to reach conclusions. However DIN 743 was used for an analysis of a new rod, with a larger fillet radius 15mm, as presented later.

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