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The Technical University of Munich, in collaboration with the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre, is organizing a
Workshop on the Assessment of Residual Stresses in Welds
on 23 November 2022, 09:00 h to 18:00 h
to mark the
20th Anniversary of the NeT European Network on Neutron Techniques Standardization for Structural Integrity.
The NeT network is a ~30 partner collaboration, based on voluntary in-kind contributions by the participants, that primarily works on residual stress assessments of welds relevant to nuclear engineering applications.
To this end, NeT relies on specimens designed and manufactured within the network. Specimens are typically small-scale mock-ups with a limited number of weld beads, in order to allow for easy exchange between measurement partners and to limit the computational demands for numerical analyses (see 20 Years NeT poster).
The special characteristic of NeT are the extensive residual stress measurement round robin exercises, utilizing a variety of measurement techniques, and the equally extensive numerical simulation round robin exercises. Over the years, NeT has arguably produced some of the best characterized welding residual stress benchmarks in existence.
The aim of the Workshop is to provide an insight to the work within NeT, including the development of the specimens, the materials characterization work, residual stress measurement techniques, numerical assessment methods, the lessons learned and how these are utilized in nuclear engineering problems.
Attendance of the Workshop is free-of-charge; registration is required. Workshop attendees may be invited – space permitting – to follow also the subsequent regular progress meeting of the NeT European Network on 24 and 25 Nov.
The Workshop is foreseen to be with attendance in-person, provided it is permitted by the pandemic situation at the time. Remote attendance opportunities are in preparation as well.
Manufacturing processes results in residual stresses that can be high enough to plastically deform the material. The superposition of residual stresses to those resulting from external loadings can not only contribute to premature failure of structural components, but also affect the driving force for crack initiation and propagation.
In the last year, crack problems have been reported in the nuclear industry, resulting from the association of residual stresses with corrosive environments, high temperatures, internal pressure, and so on. Understanding the physical mechanisms related to the presence of these cracks and developing robust models for its prediction are major challenges of the research carried out at the Energy Division (DES) of CEA.
In this context, the welded joints of structural materials are of high interest as they present mechanical and microstructural discontinuities within the structural material due the successive torch passes during the welding process. Instrumented experimental tests and numerical simulation studies have therefore been carried out in order to master welding processes, in order to better understand their effects on different materials.
In relation with the NeT activites, these studies allows:
• validating numerical welding models (finite element code Cast3M) in respect to experimental measurements and observations (residual stress, plastic strain, temperature, microstructure and so on);
• improving the existing material property databases and discussing on suitable constitutive material behavior for welding simulations;
• obtaining a better knowledge on residual stress profiles and on their effect on crack triggering.
Diffraction methods are powerful tools for non-destructive analysis of applied or residual stresses. The high penetrating power of neutrons when compared to laboratory x-ray sources, i.e. several cm instead of a few tens of μm, opens up the possibility to analyze residual stresses in the interior of technical components rather than just at the surface. This makes neutrons an ideal tool for residual stress determination in thick samples like the welded test specimens used in the different NeT task groups.
In addition, the possibility to keep the measurement gauge volume cubic in all possible sample orientations is extremely helpful in order to analyze the local stress tensor used to validate the extensive numerical simulations of the corresponding NeT task group projects.
In this presentation, we will give an overview on the basic principles and requirements of the method and its use within NeT. A few key examples are given as well as a quick review on lessons learned during the measurement campaigns.