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Translated Articles

Study on the relationship between the root welding residual stress and the root-failure fatigue strength of Plug Welded specimens

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Abstract

It is difficult to examine the relation between the root notch welding residual stress (WRS) and the root-failure fatigue strength because of the difficulty in the direct root WRS measurement. The root WRS can be calculated by thermal elastic-plastic finite element analysis (TEPFEA), but its accuracy has not been fully verified yet. In this study, root-failure fatigue tests, in which direct root WRS measurement can be performed, are carried out. Plug welded (PW) specimens with backing plates are used in those tests, and the root WRS in as-welded (AW) and stress-relieved (SR = PWHT) specimens are measured using X-ray diffraction (XRD) method by cutting off the backing plate. The measured WRSs are compared with those calculated by TEPFEA. It is found that the root WRSs in the PW specimens estimated by TEPFEA become much larger than those measured when creep strain is neglected. The SR specimen’s fatigue strength improvement ratio is estimated by using the mean stress effect formulas developed for toe-failure cases (IIW Fatigue Recommendations and MIL-HDBK-5D). The estimated improvement ratio shows fair agreement with that measured.

Acknowledgement

The authors would like to thank Mr. Takumi Sugimoto (Osaka University Graduate School at the time of the research) for his great efforts in determining the creep material properties. The authors would like to express their gratitude to him. This research was conducted as part of a joint research project between Osaka University and Komatsu in the fiscal year 2021. We would like to express our deepest gratitude to all parties involved.

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