×
The submission system is temporarily under maintenance. Please send your manuscripts to
Go to Editorial ManagerThe aim of the present paper is to investigate buckling phenomenon of various cracked plates under compression load. The finite element procedure (ANSYS Package) is used to determine the critical buckling load by considering the effects of crack length and crack location (i.e. crack parameters) as well as loading direction parallel or perpendicular with respect to crack faces. It is found from the obtained results which are summarized graphically in figures that the crack parameters and loading direction have significant effects on the critical buckling load (i.e. increased or decreased) of compressed cracked plates. The effects of these factors are discussed in detail. The useful and interesting conclusions drawn from this work will be helpful for health monitoring or condition assessment of aging plated structures with cracking damages.
This study focuses on evaluating the structural integrity of SA-312 Grade TP316 pipeline with various forms of corrosion defects. The corrosion defects were characterized by three distinct geometries: internal rectangular, external rectangular, and internal elliptical. The effect of defect length, width and depth on pipeline failure pressure is investigated using the finite element method ANSYS software version 21. Regression analysis is conducted to develop equations relating maximum pressure to defect dimensions. The results show good agreement between the finite element results, experimental data, theoretical predictions, and design codes, with an error rate ranging from 3.98% to 17.79%. Failure pressure was found to be highly sensitive to corrosion dimensions, but the depth of corrosion has a greater impact on the failure pressure. Furthermore, it was observed that internal corrosion poses a greater threat to pipeline integrity than external corrosion.
Image segmentation is the process of automatically dividing an image into distinct, meaningful, and non-overlapping regions. The quality of the segmentation process determines the efficiency of other image processing tasks. Analyzing microstructural images is crucial since the mechanical properties are strongly dependent on the microstructural phases’ statistics. These images are considered one of the most difficult and challenging images to deal with due to their special characteristics, such as the convergence in pixels intensity values, overlapping in colors, boundaries and textures in phase regions, infinite shapes of grains and colonies, etc. As there is no generic technique suitable to be used with all microstructures, this work reviews techniques that have been effectively used and recommended to be employed in metallurgical research, with a brief description of their principles, advantages, and disadvantages, and discusses their applicability. The major aim of this work is to spare time and effort searching for and experimenting with all the available methods for future researchers.
In this paper friction stir welding process has been studied whereby utilized FEM method (Ansys software ver. 20). The main effective parameter in this process were rotational speed, linear speed, tool shoulder radius, heat transfer coefficient and clamping percentage to study their influence on represent temperature, von misses stress and frictional stress distribution. Because of the difficulty to obtained the number of the simulation cases in order to get the most important results, Taguchi L27 orthogonal array was apply to reduce the total number of the simulation cases. Pure copper (t = 3.18 mm) material type was applied as work plate material. ANOVA statistical tool was utilized to achieved the optimization process after the simulation cases done. Percentage of contribution of each parameter can be obtained by ANOVA table and mean of S/N ratio plot. Validation process was achieved between the Current study and experiment work in the temperature distribution field with percentage of error 2.7 %. From optimization result It is found that the optimum condition in order to obtained good results for temperature was rotational speed of (450 rpm), linear speed (2.75 mm/s), tool shoulder radius (7 mm), heat transfer coefficient (300 w/m 2 K), clamping distance percentage (40 %). And for von misses stress was rotational speed of (550 rpm), linear speed (3 mm/s), tool shoulder radius (7 mm), heat transfer coefficient (300 w/m 2 K), clamping distance percentage (20 %). While for frictional stress was rotational speed of (450 rpm), linear speed (2.5 mm/s), tool shoulder radius (7 mm), heat transfer coefficient (300 w/m 2 K), clamping distance percentage (30 %).
The present investigation's main goal is to assess butt joint and T-joint plates containing misalignment, undercut and porosity welding defects by studying the influence of the defect’s parameters on the fatigue life. The fatigue life is predicted using ANSYS ver. 19 Software. The results of finite element analysis are used in the regression analysis to find relationship between the fatigue life and defects parameters. The findings demonstrated that finite element modeling and the pervious published experimental tests were in good agreement with maximum error percentage 4 %. The fatigue life differed substantially depending on the defect’s parameters.
This study investigates the vibration behavior of cantilever beams with bolted joints of different lap types (single lap and double lap) under free and forced vibration conditions. The effects of various parameters, including beam configuration, bolt preload, harmonic force magnitude, and force application position, on natural frequency, mode shape, and vibration amplitude are analyzed. Experimental work involved material selection, chemical composition testing, tension tests, beam preparation, and free and forced vibration tests with pre-torque ranging from 6 to 60 N·m and rotational speeds between 300 and 900 RPM. Numerical simulations were performed using the general-purpose finite element software ANSYS 16.1. Results indicate that the natural frequencies of single-lap bolted beams (1 or 2 bolts) are approximately equal to those of intact beams, while double-lap bolted beams exhibit slightly lower natural frequencies than intact beams with the same profile. Increasing bolt preload stabilizes the natural frequency for all beam configurations. For forced vibrations, the amplitude is strongly influenced by the magnitude and position of the applied harmonic force. Validation with experimental results shows good agreement, with a maximum error of approximately 5%.
A two-dimensional finite element method for analysis and determination of second mode stress intensity factor (KII) of several crack configurations in plates under uniaxial compression is presented in this study. Various cases including diagonal crack (i.e. corner crack, central crack as well as at different locations on the diagonal) and central kinked crack are investigated with different crack's length, orientation and location. The influence of the contact between two crack surfaces is taken into account by applying contact element procedure with desired friction coefficient. The stress intensity factor is calculated by a crack surface displacement extrapolation technique. From the obtained results of the analysis it is found that, the corner cracked plates more dangerous than the other cracked plates, since it has the highest stress intensity factor. Also, the length and orientation of the kinked crack have significant effects on the stress intensity factor. The results of this investigation is illustrated graphically, exposing some novel knowledge about the stress intensity factor and its dependence on crack configuration.