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Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects

Current standards related to welded joint defects (EN ISO 5817) only consider individual cases (i.e., single defect in a welded joint). The question remains about the behaviour of a welded joint in the simultaneous presence of several different types of defects, so-called multiple defects, which is...

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Autores principales: Aranđelović, Mihajlo, Sedmak, Simon, Jovičić, Radomir, Perković, Srđa, Burzić, Zijah, Radu, Dorin, Radaković, Zoran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8432732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34500921
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14174832
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author Aranđelović, Mihajlo
Sedmak, Simon
Jovičić, Radomir
Perković, Srđa
Burzić, Zijah
Radu, Dorin
Radaković, Zoran
author_facet Aranđelović, Mihajlo
Sedmak, Simon
Jovičić, Radomir
Perković, Srđa
Burzić, Zijah
Radu, Dorin
Radaković, Zoran
author_sort Aranđelović, Mihajlo
collection PubMed
description Current standards related to welded joint defects (EN ISO 5817) only consider individual cases (i.e., single defect in a welded joint). The question remains about the behaviour of a welded joint in the simultaneous presence of several different types of defects, so-called multiple defects, which is the topic of this research. The main focus is on defects most commonly encountered in practice, such as linear misalignments, undercuts, incomplete root penetration, and excess weld metal. The welding procedure used in this case was metal active gas welding, a common technique when it comes to welding low-alloy low-carbon steels, including those used for pressure equipment. Different combinations of these defects were deliberately made in welded plates and tested in a standard way on a tensile machine, along with numerical simulations using the finite element method (FEM), based on real geometries. The goal was to predict the behaviour in terms of stress concentrations caused by geometry and affected by multiple defects and material heterogeneity. Numerical and experimental results were in good agreement, but only after some modifications of numerical models. The obtained stress values in the models ranged from noticeably lower than the yield stress of the used materials to slightly higher than it, suggesting that some defect combinations resulted in plastic strain, whereas other models remained in the elastic area. The stress–strain diagram obtained for the first group (misalignment, undercut, and excess root penetration) shows significantly less plasticity. Its yield stress is very close to its ultimate tensile strength, which in turn is noticeably lower compared with the other three groups. This suggests that welded joints with misalignment and incomplete root penetration are indeed the weakest of the four groups either due to the combination of the present defects or perhaps because of an additional unseen internal defect. From the other three diagrams, it can be concluded that the test specimens show very similar behaviour with nearly identical ultimate tensile strengths and considerable plasticity. The diagrams shows the most prominent yielding, with an easily distinguishable difference between the elastic and plastic regions. The diagrams are the most similar, having the same strain of around 9% and with a less obvious yield stress limit.
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spelling pubmed-84327322021-09-11 Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects Aranđelović, Mihajlo Sedmak, Simon Jovičić, Radomir Perković, Srđa Burzić, Zijah Radu, Dorin Radaković, Zoran Materials (Basel) Article Current standards related to welded joint defects (EN ISO 5817) only consider individual cases (i.e., single defect in a welded joint). The question remains about the behaviour of a welded joint in the simultaneous presence of several different types of defects, so-called multiple defects, which is the topic of this research. The main focus is on defects most commonly encountered in practice, such as linear misalignments, undercuts, incomplete root penetration, and excess weld metal. The welding procedure used in this case was metal active gas welding, a common technique when it comes to welding low-alloy low-carbon steels, including those used for pressure equipment. Different combinations of these defects were deliberately made in welded plates and tested in a standard way on a tensile machine, along with numerical simulations using the finite element method (FEM), based on real geometries. The goal was to predict the behaviour in terms of stress concentrations caused by geometry and affected by multiple defects and material heterogeneity. Numerical and experimental results were in good agreement, but only after some modifications of numerical models. The obtained stress values in the models ranged from noticeably lower than the yield stress of the used materials to slightly higher than it, suggesting that some defect combinations resulted in plastic strain, whereas other models remained in the elastic area. The stress–strain diagram obtained for the first group (misalignment, undercut, and excess root penetration) shows significantly less plasticity. Its yield stress is very close to its ultimate tensile strength, which in turn is noticeably lower compared with the other three groups. This suggests that welded joints with misalignment and incomplete root penetration are indeed the weakest of the four groups either due to the combination of the present defects or perhaps because of an additional unseen internal defect. From the other three diagrams, it can be concluded that the test specimens show very similar behaviour with nearly identical ultimate tensile strengths and considerable plasticity. The diagrams shows the most prominent yielding, with an easily distinguishable difference between the elastic and plastic regions. The diagrams are the most similar, having the same strain of around 9% and with a less obvious yield stress limit. MDPI 2021-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8432732/ /pubmed/34500921 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14174832 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Aranđelović, Mihajlo
Sedmak, Simon
Jovičić, Radomir
Perković, Srđa
Burzić, Zijah
Radu, Dorin
Radaković, Zoran
Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title_full Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title_fullStr Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title_full_unstemmed Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title_short Numerical and Experimental Investigations of Fracture Behaviour of Welded Joints with Multiple Defects
title_sort numerical and experimental investigations of fracture behaviour of welded joints with multiple defects
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8432732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34500921
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14174832
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