Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Residual Stress for Structural Integrity Assessment of Proximity Girth Welds

PhD thesis in Offshore technology Over the last decade, there has been a growing interest in the life extension of existing welded structures in offshore and renewable industry. During this phase of extension, repair of welded structures is a common practise which requires careful estimation of resi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Volume 3: Materials Technology
Main Author: Bhardwaj, Sachin
Other Authors: Ratnayake, R.M. Chandima, Langøy, Morten Andre
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Stavanger, Norway 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3041012
Description
Summary:PhD thesis in Offshore technology Over the last decade, there has been a growing interest in the life extension of existing welded structures in offshore and renewable industry. During this phase of extension, repair of welded structures is a common practise which requires careful estimation of residual stresses as per the defect assessment procedures of structural integrity. Repair of welds requires modification or fabrication of new welds in proximity to existing girth welds in highly constrained geometry of welded structures. Weld placement is a subject often debated by contractors and inspection engineers when deciding how to maintain a ‘minimum distance’ between repair and existing welds. International fabrication codes and standards are inconclusive in recommending minimum distance criteria between newly fabricated welds; however, it is completely lacking a description for this criterion for repair weld placement. This research investigates the challenges that are encountered due to proximity of welds on structural integrity of aging welded structures. Case study-based research method is used to perform this large-scale experimental study and its validation by use of non-destructive and numerical techniques for estimation of residual stresses in proximity girth welds. Firstly, weld placement criteria for maintaining ‘minimum distance between welds’ was investigated across various domains of fabrication and repair codes in offshore structures, pipeline s & piping’s. A clear lack of consensus was found when it comes to defining the criteria after assessment of various repair and fabrication codes and no reported technical justification was found in open literature. A detailed literature review for residual stress profile estimations at a distance away from the weld toe in defect assessment procedures of API 579, BS 7910, R6, etc., was conducted and which were found to be practically non-existent for girth weldments. Key parameters like pipe geometry (radius to diameter ratio), heat input per unit ...