Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications

Many petroleum companies expand their activities further north towards the Arctic region, resulting in design temperatures down to -60 °C, which is much lower than what is usual for most current petroleum installations. As properties of steels are temperature dependent, it is of great interest to ev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dahl, Bjørn Augdal
Other Authors: Akselsen, Odd Magne, Zhang, Zhiliang
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2406367
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author Dahl, Bjørn Augdal
author2 Akselsen, Odd Magne
Zhang, Zhiliang
author_facet Dahl, Bjørn Augdal
author_sort Dahl, Bjørn Augdal
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
description Many petroleum companies expand their activities further north towards the Arctic region, resulting in design temperatures down to -60 °C, which is much lower than what is usual for most current petroleum installations. As properties of steels are temperature dependent, it is of great interest to evaluate the effects of low temperature on the crack driving force in steels. The present work investigates these effects numerically using finite element (FE) models of single-edge-notched-tension (SENT) specimens with crack depths 0.1 < a/W < 0.5. The effects of Lüders strain, yield strength and crack depth on the crack tip opening displacement (CTOD) and the relation between CTOD and crack mouth opening displacement (CMOD) are studied, and it is shown that an increase in yield strength and Lüders strain, as a result of Arctic temperature, intensifies the crack driving force. It is also shown that the crack depth has very little influence on the effect of Lüders strain on the CTOD. An approximate model that can be used to estimate the CTOD based on yield strength, Lüders strain and loading is proposed for gross stress levels σ_G/σ_y < 0.5 and a crack depth a/W = 0.5. It is finally shown that the tensile properties have a more significant effect on the CTOD-CMOD relation than the crack depth for a SENT specimen.
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spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2406367 2025-05-18T13:58:36+00:00 Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications Dahl, Bjørn Augdal Akselsen, Odd Magne Zhang, Zhiliang 2016 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2406367 eng eng NTNU ntnudaim:14731 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2406367 72 Produktutvikling og produksjon Produktutvikling og materialer Master thesis 2016 ftntnutrondheimi 2025-04-23T04:50:50Z Many petroleum companies expand their activities further north towards the Arctic region, resulting in design temperatures down to -60 °C, which is much lower than what is usual for most current petroleum installations. As properties of steels are temperature dependent, it is of great interest to evaluate the effects of low temperature on the crack driving force in steels. The present work investigates these effects numerically using finite element (FE) models of single-edge-notched-tension (SENT) specimens with crack depths 0.1 < a/W < 0.5. The effects of Lüders strain, yield strength and crack depth on the crack tip opening displacement (CTOD) and the relation between CTOD and crack mouth opening displacement (CMOD) are studied, and it is shown that an increase in yield strength and Lüders strain, as a result of Arctic temperature, intensifies the crack driving force. It is also shown that the crack depth has very little influence on the effect of Lüders strain on the CTOD. An approximate model that can be used to estimate the CTOD based on yield strength, Lüders strain and loading is proposed for gross stress levels σ_G/σ_y < 0.5 and a crack depth a/W = 0.5. It is finally shown that the tensile properties have a more significant effect on the CTOD-CMOD relation than the crack depth for a SENT specimen. Master Thesis Arctic NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Arctic
spellingShingle Produktutvikling og produksjon
Produktutvikling og materialer
Dahl, Bjørn Augdal
Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title_full Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title_fullStr Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title_short Effect of Low Temperature Tensile Properties on Crack Driving Force for Arctic Applications
title_sort effect of low temperature tensile properties on crack driving force for arctic applications
topic Produktutvikling og produksjon
Produktutvikling og materialer
topic_facet Produktutvikling og produksjon
Produktutvikling og materialer
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2406367