Effect of Boundary Conditions on Residual Stresses and Distortion in 316 Stainless Steel Butt Welded Plate

In the present work, the prediction of residual stresses and distortion due to GTA welding process, a Finite Element (FE)Method has been developed and applied. Stainless steel plate of 3mm thickness is taken for the analysis. The prediction of residual stresses and distortion is performed by thermal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Venkatkumar Dhayanithi, Ravindran Durairaj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-02-01
Series:High Temperature Materials and Processes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/htmp-2019-0048
Description
Summary:In the present work, the prediction of residual stresses and distortion due to GTA welding process, a Finite Element (FE)Method has been developed and applied. Stainless steel plate of 3mm thickness is taken for the analysis. The prediction of residual stresses and distortion is performed by thermal and mechanical analysis that is sequentially coupled. The thermal analysis and mechanical analysis of the plate subjected to heat source movement have been studied consecutively. The FE analysis is performed in ANSYS software. In transient thermal analysis, Gaussian distribution model has been used for heat input of the arc. During modeling, the physical and mechanical properties that depend on temperature are considered. The heat transfer losses through all the three mechanisms are incorporated. For validating the FE simulated analysis, an experiment is conducted. The predicted thermal histories are very close agreement with measured thermocouple readings. After validation of thermal analysis results, the transient thermal histories are used as input for further mechanical analysis to simulate. The large displacement theory is used to conduct mechanical analysis. The effect of constraints on distortion and residual stresses are numerically studied. The predicted stresses and distortion results of different cases are discussed and presented.
ISSN:0334-6455
2191-0324