Ductile fracture of advanced pipeline steels: Study of stress states and energies in dynamic impact specimens - CVN and DWTT

dc.contributor.authorSantos Pereira L.D.
dc.contributor.authorMoco R.F.
dc.contributor.authorBolognesi Donato G.H.
dc.date.accessioned2019-08-20T00:13:17Z
dc.date.available2019-08-20T00:13:17Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstract© 2018 The Authors.The development of robust protocols for assessing the structural integrity of gas pipelines is of paramount relevance, since failures can lead to financial and human losses. In this scenario, the material's ability to slow down the propagation of a running crack (crack arrest) becomes a design requirement. Several empirical models and criteria, calibrated by real pipeline burst tests, have been developed, being the Battele Two Curve Method (BTCM) one example of technique widely employed during decades. With the evolution of steels, there was a significant increase of ductility and toughness, in a way that such semi-empirical models usually based on the energy absorbed in the Charpy impact test (ISO 148-1, ASTM E-23) began to present unsatisfactory predictions. This may be explained by the fact that in current high-ductility and high-toughness materials (e.g.: API-5L X65, X80, X100), the dominant mechanism of fracture propagation is plastic collapse. Consequently, the energies involved in deforming and fracturing a laboratory specimen are remarkably altered and transferability to pipelines by means of the aforementioned models can be lost. Therefore, for a better phenomenological comprehension of the ductile fracture process under such circumstances, this work investigates Charpy and DWTT (ASTM E-436) dynamic tests assessing stress fields and respective energies involved in deformation and fracture. It is of great interest to evaluate the energy associated to steady state ductile fracture and thus try to characterize the energy available to slow down an ongoing fracture. Pipelines are references for the developments and support assumptions and some conclusions. Based on these golas, numerical analyses including damage models (XFEM and GTN) were implemented, including parameters' calibration and sensitivity analyses. The methodology closely reproduced available experimental results. Besides that, stress fields and energies could be quantified for the studied geometries and such analyses indicated the potential and limitations of Charpy and DWTT specimens to characterize the energies required to describe steady state ductile crack propagation and crack arrestability. Results support further developments related to pipeline integrity assessments.
dc.description.firstpage1985
dc.description.lastpage1992
dc.description.volume13
dc.identifier.citationSANTOS PEREIRA, LETÍCIA DOS; MOÇO, RODRYGO FIGUEIREDO; DONATO, Gustavo. Ductile fracture of advanced pipeline steels: study of stress states and energies in dynamic impact specimens - CVN and DWTT. Procedia Structural Integrity, v. 13, p. 1985-1992, 2018.
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.prostr.2018.12.219
dc.identifier.issn2452-3216
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.fei.edu.br/handle/FEI/2019
dc.relation.ispartofProcedia Structural Integrity
dc.rightsAcesso Aberto
dc.subject.otherlanguageAdvanced steels
dc.subject.otherlanguageCrack arrest
dc.subject.otherlanguageDamage models
dc.subject.otherlanguageEnergy assessment
dc.subject.otherlanguageGas pipelines
dc.titleDuctile fracture of advanced pipeline steels: Study of stress states and energies in dynamic impact specimens - CVN and DWTT
dc.typeArtigo de evento
fei.scopus.citations3
fei.scopus.eid2-s2.0-85064656773
fei.scopus.updated2024-02-01
fei.scopus.urlhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85064656773&origin=inward
Arquivos
Coleções