Publication | Closed Access
Monitoring of thermal stresses in pressure components using inverse heat conduction methods
29
Citations
5
References
2017
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringBoiler Pressure ElementHeat PipePressure VesselStructural EngineeringThermal AnalysisThermodynamicsThermal ModelingThermomechanical AnalysisStructural Health MonitoringHeat TransferFinite Element MethodTemperature MeasurementThermal ManagementThermal StressesPressure ComponentsThermal SensorStructural MechanicsThermal EngineeringMechanics Of Materials
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to present a method for monitoring transient thermal stresses. This paper also presents the analysis of thermal stresses of boiler pressure element heating during the start-up in real conditions. The inverse methods are used to determine the wall temperature, whereas the commercial software ANSYS is used to determine the thermal stresses in the pressure component. Design/methodology/approach The method is based on the solution of the inverse heat conduction problem. Thermal stresses are determined indirectly taking into account the measured temperature values at selected points on the outer wall of a pressure component. First, the transient temperature distribution in the entire pressure element is calculated, and then, thermal stresses are determined by the finite element method. Measured pressure changes are used to determine the stresses resultant from the internal pressure. Findings The obtained stresses and temperature in the thick-walled pipe are illustrated and compared with experimental data. Satisfactory agreement was found between computational and experimental results. Originality/value The method can be used in the monitoring of thermal and mechanical stresses during the boiler’s start-up and shut-down. Because the temperature distribution at each time level is determined, it can be applied as a thermal load during the structural analysis.
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