mylexicon
Mechanical
- Dec 16, 2005
- 43
I was trying to perfom a dynamic (harmonic analysis) on a piping system of SS austenitic type) material. In order to check my dynamic stresses, I was looking for the appropriate source of reference and the applicable S-N (stress range vs. no. of cycles) curve. So, I did some reading and I am a little lost now. I am having a hard time deciding what curve and what source to use for my fatigue assessment.
Questions:
1) ASME VIII Div 3...
In Article KD-3 of 'ASME VIII-Div 3' S-N curves are provided for different parent material and a safety factor of 2.0 (converting peak to peak stress to zero to peak) is recommended. For the speicific case of Austenitic SS, S-N curve in Fig. KD-320.3M is available and Cycles are limited to 1e6. Does this curve apply to both welded and non-welded SS parts? And what if the fatigue analysis is for cycles higher than 1e6? what do we do then?
2) The other sources I was considering for my analysis are BS5500 & BS7608. BS has a fundamentally different approach...just One S-N curve is used for CS, SS, & Aluminum alloys but the temperature limits of applicability are different for each material. For components which are in service, curves are provided for different 'weld' classes! these curves define a 97.7% probability of survival. What is confusing me is that the stress values which I read off the BS7608 curves are much less (i.e.; more conservative) than that of the ASME VIII curve for austenitic SS!!!
So how about it? how do I get past this dilemma? any guidance is appreciated.
thanks,
Farzad
Questions:
1) ASME VIII Div 3...
In Article KD-3 of 'ASME VIII-Div 3' S-N curves are provided for different parent material and a safety factor of 2.0 (converting peak to peak stress to zero to peak) is recommended. For the speicific case of Austenitic SS, S-N curve in Fig. KD-320.3M is available and Cycles are limited to 1e6. Does this curve apply to both welded and non-welded SS parts? And what if the fatigue analysis is for cycles higher than 1e6? what do we do then?
2) The other sources I was considering for my analysis are BS5500 & BS7608. BS has a fundamentally different approach...just One S-N curve is used for CS, SS, & Aluminum alloys but the temperature limits of applicability are different for each material. For components which are in service, curves are provided for different 'weld' classes! these curves define a 97.7% probability of survival. What is confusing me is that the stress values which I read off the BS7608 curves are much less (i.e.; more conservative) than that of the ASME VIII curve for austenitic SS!!!
So how about it? how do I get past this dilemma? any guidance is appreciated.
thanks,
Farzad