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Prediction of Failure Behavior for Nuclear Piping Using Curved Wide-Plate Test
15
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
EngineeringRelevant Fracture ToughnessMechanical EngineeringPressure VesselStructural EngineeringFailure BehaviorStrength PropertyStressstrain AnalysisReliabilityStructural Health MonitoringEngineering Failure AnalysisSolid MechanicsNuclear PipingNuclear EngineeringPhysic Of FailureFracture ToughnessCivil EngineeringNuclear SafetyCrack FormationStructural MechanicsDynamic Crack PropagationMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
One important element of the Leak-Before-Break analysis of nuclear piping is how to determine relevant fracture toughness (or the J-resistance curve) for nonlinear fracture mechanics analysis. The practice to use fracture toughness from a standard C(T) specimen is known to often give conservative estimates of toughness. To improve the accuracy of predicting piping failure, this paper proposes a new method to determine fracture toughness using a nonstandard testing specimen, curved wide-plate in tension. To show validity of the proposed curved wide-plate test, the J-resistance curve from the full-scale pipe test is compared with that from the curved wide-plate test and that from C(T) specimen. It is shown that the J-resistance curve from the curved wide-plate tension test is similar to, but that from the C(T) specimen is lower than, the J-resistance curve from the full-scale pipe test. Further validation is performed by investigating crack-tip constraint conditions via detailed three-dimensional finite element analyses, which shows that the crack-tip constraint condition in the curved wide-plate tension specimen is indeed similar to that in the full-scale pipe under bending.
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