Fatigue design of mild and high-strength steel cruciform joints in as-welded and HFMI-treated condition by nominal and effective notch stress approach

Peter Brunnhofer*, Christian Buzzi, Tobias Pertoll, Martin Rieger, Martin Leitner

*Korrespondierende/r Autor/-in für diese Arbeit

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/KonferenzbandBeitrag in einem KonferenzbandBegutachtung

Abstract

According to the Recommendations for Fatigue Design of Welded Joints and Components by the International Institute of Welding (IIW), the fatigue strength of welded steel joints is in general independent of the base material strength. Post-treatment methods, such as the High Frequency Mechanical Impact (HFMI) treatment, can significantly increase the fatigue performance of welded joints especially in case of high-strength steel applications, which is already considered within the IIW Recommendations for the HFMI Treatment. This paper firstly investigates the effect of the base material strength on the fatigue resistance of welded and HFMI-treated steel joints. Therefore, mild steel S355 and high-strength steel S700 cruciform joints are cyclically tested in both conditions and the statistically evaluated S/N-curves are compared. The results reveal an increase of the high-cycle fatigue strength by the HFMI-treatment by a factor of 1.35 in case of the S355, and of 1.59 for the S700 specimens. Secondly, the test results are assessed by the fatigue design curves of the corresponding structural detail within the IIW-recommendations using the nominal stress concept. Moreover, the applicability of the procedure applying the effective notch approach is analyzed. In order to numerically evaluate the effective notch stress, the geometry of the cruciform joint is modelled according to the given guidelines within the recommendations applying a reference radius of 1 mm at the weld toe for both conditions. On the basis of the numerically computed effective notch stress, a local fatigue design is performed for all test series, which reveals sound accordance between the recommended design curves and the statistically evaluated fatigue test S/N-curves.

Originalspracheenglisch
TitelFatigue Design 2021, International Conference Proceedings
Redakteure/-innenFabien Lefebvre, Pascal Souquet
Seiten477-489
Seitenumfang13
Band38
AuflageC
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2021
VeranstaltungFatigue Design 2021: 9th Edition of the International Conference on Fatigue Design - Senlis, Frankreich
Dauer: 17 Nov. 202119 Nov. 2021
http://fatiguedesign.org/

Publikationsreihe

NameProcedia Structural Integrity

Konferenz

KonferenzFatigue Design 2021
Land/GebietFrankreich
OrtSenlis
Zeitraum17/11/2119/11/21
Internetadresse

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Allgemeiner Maschinenbau
  • Werkstoffmechanik
  • Maschinenbau
  • Allgemeine Materialwissenschaften
  • Tief- und Ingenieurbau

Fields of Expertise

  • Mobility & Production

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