Durability & Life Extension
Notwithstanding the modern “consumer society”, life
assessment and extending the life of plant and machines are major
concerns in many industries including aerospace, power generation,
building, transport and offshore engineering. There is considerable
demand for better predictive computational models to account for
long term failure processes, particularly fatigue and fatigue life
prediction, but also creep, fracture, corrosion, ageing and damage.
A key issue here is how to model material behaviour to account for
a wide range of behaviour, often non-linear, under different
loadings and environmental conditions at a range of physical
scales.
Examples include micro-scale damage models to describe the fracture
processes in fibrereinforced composites, continuum mechanics
analysis of creep damage, debonding in microelectronics packaging,
simulation of weld behaviour, and macro scale models of the
long-term creep of concrete. For many industries, durability and
life extension issues are stimulating considerable interest in how
to model ageing and deterioration effects e.g. embrittlement of
metals due to radiation, creep of plastics and metals, effects of
corrosion in reinforced concrete or deterioration of historical
structures, build masonry or stone. Efforts in this area
concentrate on improved understanding of these phenomena at the
material level and on development of continuously enhanced
deterioration models.
A further issue is how to treat the inevitable uncertainty that
arises from the characterisation of such problems, for example
using probabilistic or stochastic methods. Significant efforts are
spent on data gathering and on development of sophisticated
stochastic models for each deterioration phenomenon. This trend
will inevitably continue as new materials will emerge, often with
different deterioration characteristics and variabilities.
Project Reports
Summary of the Project Findings relating to Durability & Life
Extension
(as presented at the project review meeting in Malta, May 2005)
(PDF Format)
D3610 - State of the Art Review - Weld Simulation Using Finite
Element Methods (PDF)
Dr Anas Yaghi and Professor Adib Becker University of Nottingham,
UK
D3613 - Advanced Finite Element Contact Benchmarks (PDF)
A.W.A. Konter, Netherlands Institute for Metals Research
Project Workshops
Design by Analysis: The Use of Finite Element Analysis in Design Codes of Practice 2 24th Feb 2005 Budapest, Hungary
|
Advanced FE Contact Benchmarks IV 24th Feb 2005 Budapest, Hungary
|
Design by Analysis: The Use of Finite Element Analysis in Design Codes of Practice 1 24th Feb 2005 Budapest, Hungary
|
Advanced FE Contact Benchmarks III 7th Oct 2004 Glasgow, UK
|
Advanced FE Contact Benchmarks II 24th Mar 2004 Majorca, Spain
|
FE Issues Related to Creep and Viscoelasticity 24th Mar 2004 Majorca, Spain
|
Modeling Fatigue of Metals 8th Oct 2003 Noordwijk, Netherlands
|
Finite Element Simulation of Welds and Joints 26th Feb 2003 Barcelona, Spain
|
Finite Element Simulation of Fracture and Crack Growth 11th Sep 2002 Trieste, Italy
|
FE Issues Related to Structural Integrity (Fracture, Fatigue, Creep) 13th Jun 2002 Zurich, Switzerland
|
Advanced FE Contact Benchmarks I 27th Feb 2002 Copenhagen, Denmark
|
Durability & Life Extension - Initial Discussion 13th Nov 2001 Wiesbaden, Germany
|
|