Elastic-plastic finite element analyses of stable crack growth and fracture instability in a girth welded pipe

1985 
Abstract Detailed elastic-plastic finite element fracture mechanics analyses were conducted on a 16 inch diameter Type 304 stainless steel pipe containing a circumferential through-wall crack located in a girth weld. Calculations were performed to analyze the welded pipe treated as (1) a monolithic pipe entirely composed of the base metal, and (2) a composite of base metal and weldment. In the latter, each constituent was assigned distinct mechanical and fracture properties. In both solutions applied J values were calculated for a fixed axial load combined with a monotonically increasing applied bending moment. The material J -resistance curves appropriate for the two problems were each used to initiate and grow the initial crack in a stable manner until fracture instability occurred under load control. It was found that the extent of stable crack growth and the applied loads at fracture instability are distinctly different in the two analyses. It is concluded that more precise fracture mechanics approaches than those now in current use are required for accurate assessments of weld cracking problems.
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