PSI - Issue 33
Aprianur Fajri et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 33 (2021) 11–18 Fajri et al. / Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2019) 000–000
13 3
used, namely: Goodman in Eq. (3), Soderberg in Eq. (4), Gerber in Eq. (5), and ASME Elliptical in Eq. (6) (Venkatasudhahar et al., 2014)
Fig. 1. Different alternating stress condition : (a) zero mean; (b) ratio
S
S
alternating
(3)
1
mean
S
S
endurance
ultimate
S
S
(4)
alternating
1
mean S yield
S
endurance
2
S
S
alternating
(5)
1
mean
S
S
endurance
ultimate
2
2
S
S S
alternating
1
(6)
mean
S
endurance
yield
The Fatigue life can be calculated based on the rules of the Palmgren-Miner linear damage hypothesis in Eq. (7). (7) Where, � is the number of stress range cycles due to different factual stresses in the � �� � � � �� Then � is the number of cycles resulting in the failure of the constant alternating stress � (derived from the S-N Curve), failure occurs when cumulative damage ( D ) is greater than 1 3. Test References Fatigue analysis on notched cantilever beams using FEM was conducted by Köksal et al. (2013). The material used in this study is a structural steel with mechanical properties shown in Table 1 and fatigue data test in Fig. 2. The dimensions of the geometry model are 1000 x 100 x 75 mm, with a notch angle of 90 o and a depth of 25 mm (see illustration in Fig. 3). This cantilever beam is designed with a minimum life of 10 6 cycles. 1 N k i i i n D
Table 1. Mechanical properties of structural steel. Modulus elasticity (GPa)
Poisson’s ratio
Yield strength (MPa)
Ultimate tensile strength (MPa)
200
0.3
250
460
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