engineer121394
Mechanical
- Sep 8, 2022
- 12
Here is my understanding so far:
-Design stress, or allowable stress (Sm) is “typically” (ultimately depending on the application, and assuming Su is not limiting) 2*Sy/3
-primary stress (P) is result of external loading (weight, pressure, shock etc.) The limit is Sm
-secondary stress (Q) is stress from compatibility condition loads like preload or thermal loads.
-Primary (P) plus secondary (Q) stress difference range (later denoted as S_diff) considers the sum of the primary and secondary stresses (excluding peak stress) between two different states (i.e. comparing P+Q for pressurized vs unpressurized operating states). The limit for this is 3*Sm (or 2*Sy). We evaluate this to determine if ratcheting will occur (low cycle fatigue failure mode where progressive plastic deformation occurs for each loading cycle). If this limit is exceeded, fatigue penalty factors are applied to fatigue limits to account for plastic deformation (because typical fatigue analysis assumes the material is within elastic limits).
My question:
Why do we evaluate primary plus secondary stress difference range when we also evaluate fatigue stress? Wouldn’t high cycle fatigue always be limiting?
Wouldn’t fatigue strength limits be bounded by a materials yield strength? If the following is true:
- S_alt = S_diff/2 (neglecting S_alt peak stresses)
- Limit for S_alt is less than Sy
- Limit for S_diff is 2*Sy
…Then wouldn’t high cycle fatigue be limiting. Why evaluate primary plus secondary stress difference range?
What am I missing?
-Design stress, or allowable stress (Sm) is “typically” (ultimately depending on the application, and assuming Su is not limiting) 2*Sy/3
-primary stress (P) is result of external loading (weight, pressure, shock etc.) The limit is Sm
-secondary stress (Q) is stress from compatibility condition loads like preload or thermal loads.
-Primary (P) plus secondary (Q) stress difference range (later denoted as S_diff) considers the sum of the primary and secondary stresses (excluding peak stress) between two different states (i.e. comparing P+Q for pressurized vs unpressurized operating states). The limit for this is 3*Sm (or 2*Sy). We evaluate this to determine if ratcheting will occur (low cycle fatigue failure mode where progressive plastic deformation occurs for each loading cycle). If this limit is exceeded, fatigue penalty factors are applied to fatigue limits to account for plastic deformation (because typical fatigue analysis assumes the material is within elastic limits).
My question:
Why do we evaluate primary plus secondary stress difference range when we also evaluate fatigue stress? Wouldn’t high cycle fatigue always be limiting?
Wouldn’t fatigue strength limits be bounded by a materials yield strength? If the following is true:
- S_alt = S_diff/2 (neglecting S_alt peak stresses)
- Limit for S_alt is less than Sy
- Limit for S_diff is 2*Sy
…Then wouldn’t high cycle fatigue be limiting. Why evaluate primary plus secondary stress difference range?
What am I missing?