Sorry guys,
I have been on the road. More details. The heavy hex nut is a "coupling". One end is threaded onto an existing stud and then a new stud is threaded into the opposing end. A torque value of 2500 ft-lbs was recommended to impose a 40,000 psi pre-stress on the coupling. The nut sheared at about where the two studs are threaded into the nut. I don't have a camera with me but you can see on the fracture face radial lines, which tells me that the coupling had some amount of torque applied. For a coupling you do not want this situation. You want pure tensile force. This lead me to believe that the nut failed due to a combination load. Torsion and the tensile load.
-----Proposed Solution-----
Using Distortion-Energy Theory for ductile materials says that ductile materials will fail due to shear and the maximum shear that a ductile material will handle is given by the following equation.
S (maximum stress due to pure torsion) = 0.577*Sy (yield strength)
So then I calculated the amount of shear stress; assumed that all 2500 ft-lbs was translated to the coupling.
shear stress (tau) = Torque*radius/J (polar moment of inertia)
Does anyone have the formula for J; for a hexagon with a hole in it?
Then I assumed that the 40,000 psi pre-stress was applied.
sigma = 40,000 psi
Then just use the principal stress equations to calculate the combined effects or use Mohr's circle.
I ran the calculation for a cylindrical shape and depending on the strength of the steel it is very close to the failure ellipse do to combined effects.
Does this method sound correct to solve this problem?
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---- Answers to questions ----
+ This is a static loading condition.
+ The only way that the stud could apply a torque to the coupling is due to dirty threads. If anyone else has some ideas they would be appreciated. But, this is the only way that I can think of.
+ I don't know if the nut failed at 40,000 psi, it might of been more, might of been less. I have to assume this value because it was recommended.
+ The stud was okay, the bolt just broke in half. No yielding, just pure shear.
+ All I know about the steel, is that the recommended grade is B87. I do not know what this means. I am still tracking this down. I know that this is standardized. Does anyone know what the standard is for a heavy hex coupling?
I hope this helps all, and I will try to check it periodically. One more question to throw out, wouldn't you also have stress concentrations at the points of the hex nut? If so, how would you factor this into the equations.