WRC 561 PDF

WRC 561 PDF

Name:
WRC 561 PDF

Published Date:
2015

Status:
Active

Description:

Finite Element Analysis of Stress Rupture in Pressure Vessels Exposed to Accidental Fire Loading

Publisher:
Welding Research Council, Inc.

Document status:
Active

Format:
Electronic (PDF)

Delivery time:
10 minutes

Delivery time (for Russian version):
200 business days

SKU:

Choose Document Language:
$22.5
Need Help?
A numerical model that predicts high temperature pressure vessel rupture was developed. The finite element method of analysis was used to determine the effects that various parameters had on pressure vessel failure. The work was concerned with 500, 1000 and 33000 US gallon pressure vessels made of SA 455 steel. Experimental pressure vessel fire tests have shown that vessel rupture in a fully engulfing fire can occur in less than 30 minutes. This experimental work was used both to validate the numerical results as well as to provide important vessel temperature distribution information.

Due to the fact that SA 455 steel is not meant for high temperature applications, there was little published high temperature material data. Therefore, elevated temperature tensile tests and creep rupture tests were performed to measure needed material properties. Creep and creep damage constants were calculated from SA 455 steel?s creep rupture data.

The Kachanov One-State Variable technique and the MPC Omega method were the creep damage techniques chosen to predict SA 455 steel's high temperature time-dependent behaviour. The specimens used in the mechanical testing were modeled to numerically predict the creep rupture behaviour measured in the lab. An extensive comparison between the experimental and numerical uniaxial creep rupture results revealed that both techniques could adequately predict failure times at all tested conditions; however, the MPC Omega method was generally more accurate at predicting creep failure strains. The comparison also showed that the MPC Omega method was more numerically stable than the One-State Variable technique when analyzing SA 455 steel's creep rupture.

The creep models were modified to account for multiaxial states of stress and were used to analyze the high temperature failure of pressure vessels. The various parameters considered included pressure vessel dimensions, fire type (fully engulfing or local impingement), peak wall temperature and internal pressure. The objective of these analyses was to gain a better understanding of the structural failure of pressure vessels exposed to various accidental fire conditions.

The numerical results of rupture time and geometry of failure region were shown to agree with experimental fire tests. From the fully engulfing fire numerical analyses, it was shown that pressure vessels with a smaller length to diameter ratio and a larger thickness to diameter ratio were inherently safer. It was also shown that as the heated area was reduced, the failure time increased for the same internal pressure and peak wall temperature. Therefore, fully engulfing fires produced more structurally unstable conditions in pressure vessels then local fire impingements.
File Size : 1 file , 7.8 MB
Note : This product is unavailable in Ukraine, Russia, Belarus
Number of Pages : 220
Published : 2015

History


Related products

WRC 222
Published Date: 1976
The Significance of Weld Discontinuities - A Review of Current Literature
$16.2
WRC 374
Published Date: 1992
Papers Presented At The Conference On "Life Of Pressure Vessels" Held By The French AFIAP In 1989
$38.1
WRC 268
Published Date: 1981
Review of Worldwide Weld Discontinuity Acceptance Standards
$16.2
WRC Volume 49 No. 05-06 1994
Published Date: 1994
Progress Reports Volume 49 No. 05-06 1994
$28.5

Best-Selling Products