trainguy
Structural
- Apr 26, 2002
- 706
All,
When designing with FEA to a requirement of "no plastic deformation" or "no yielding" under proof, one time loading, how would you utilize the results of a nonlinear static analysis?
Would you look at plastic strains and keep them under 0.2%? That's what I usually do when working with steel, for example.
I have come across some colleagues who look at stress distributions after such analyses and they identify that most of the hot spots show stresses less than yield, without examining strains. Is this valid?
Is there some accepted quantified value of plastic strain that is typically allowed?
tg
When designing with FEA to a requirement of "no plastic deformation" or "no yielding" under proof, one time loading, how would you utilize the results of a nonlinear static analysis?
Would you look at plastic strains and keep them under 0.2%? That's what I usually do when working with steel, for example.
I have come across some colleagues who look at stress distributions after such analyses and they identify that most of the hot spots show stresses less than yield, without examining strains. Is this valid?
Is there some accepted quantified value of plastic strain that is typically allowed?
tg