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contributor authorA. K. Shoemaker
contributor authorT. Melville
contributor authorJ. E. Steiner
date accessioned2017-05-09T01:37:03Z
date available2017-05-09T01:37:03Z
date copyrightFebruary, 1973
date issued1973
identifier issn1087-1357
identifier otherJMSEFK-27583#219_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/164131
description abstractSteel cylinders wrapped with steel wire have the capability of offering not only an economical high-strength structure, but also a structure with improved fracture resistance compared with that of an unwrapped cylinder of equivalent strength. Accordingly, 2000-psi-pressure hydraulic burst tests were therefore conducted to determine the fracture resistance of 36-in-dia, 60-ksi yield-strength, 1000-psi-pressure wire-wrapped cylinders at different levels of shell notch ductility, which was varied by testing at different temperatures. The cylinders were prestressed with 1/4-in-dia cold-drawn wire, and the shells contained part-through-wall flaws. A similarly flawed unwrapped cylinder was tested for comparison. The working-stress level was 72 percent of the specified minimum yield strength in the shell and 60 percent of the minimum tensile strength in the wire. The results showed that at a pressure double that of the unwrapped shell, no crack extension occurred at a temperature at which the steel exhibited fully ductile shell behavior (+110 deg F). A 2-ft crack extension occurred at a temperature (+10 deg F) at which the steel was still in the transition temperature range from ductile-to-brittle behavior (about 20 percent shear fracture), but a brittle crack (−70 deg F) propagated to the end of the wire-wrapped shell. Except for the brittle propagating crack, wire wrapping appears to provide sufficient constraint of a shell defect or propagating crack to limit bulging and crack-opening displacement. A model based on the compatibility in displacements between the crack opening and the local wire strain is presented for calculating the arrest conditions of the propagating crack in the test at 10 deg F. The same flaw size was critical at the constant failure pressure for all test temperatures, and showed that, as predicted, ductile initiation occurs even at the −70 deg F temperature in both the wrapped and unwrapped-cylinder tests. A circumferential flaw was shown to be less critical than a longitudinal flaw of the same size.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleFracture Resistance of Wire-Wrapped Cylinders
typeJournal Paper
journal volume95
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering
identifier doi10.1115/1.3438104
journal fristpage219
journal lastpage226
identifier eissn1528-8935
keywordsElectrical resistance
keywordsWire
keywordsFracture (Process)
keywordsCylinders
keywordsShells
keywordsTemperature
keywordsSteel
keywordsPressure
keywordsBrittleness
keywordsYield strength
keywordsTensile strength
keywordsDisplacement
keywordsFailure
keywordsStress
keywordsShear (Mechanics)
keywordsPhase transition temperature
keywordsDuctility AND Testing
treeJournal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering:;1973:;volume( 095 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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