The study of creep in machine elements using finite element methods

Master Thesis

1990

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University of Cape Town

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In this thesis a simplified analysis procedure is developed, in which creep laws are decoupled from damage laws, for the purposb of constructing methods of use in the early stages of high temperature design. The procedure is based on the creep and damage laws proposed by Kachanov and Rabotnov. The creep laws are normalised. with respect to a convenient normalising stress. As a consequence of this normalisation, the dependence of the creep law on the stress constant, the time and temperature functions, and the actual load level is removed. In addition, if the reference stress of the component is chosen as the normalising stress, the creep law becomes insensitive to the stress exponent. The non-dimensional creep laws are then implemented in a standard finite element scheme, from which the results of a stationary state creep analysis are then in non-dimensional form. In order to estimate rupture times, the maximum stationary stresses in a component are used together with the damage laws. Conservative failure criteria are derived from the creep and damage laws to extend the method to residual life assessment and damage monitoring. The procedure is illustrated and tested against simple examples and case studies.
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Bibliography: pages 92-98.

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