Paper
18 April 2006 An application of the differential thermographic technique for welded joints fatigue evaluation
Caterina Casavola, Umberto Galietti, Damiano Modugno, Carmine Pappalettere
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6205, Thermosense XXVIII; 62050W (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.662026
Event: Defense and Security Symposium, 2006, Orlando (Kissimmee), Florida, United States
Abstract
The paper deals with the possibility of using the differential thermography (Thermoelastic Stress Analysis) to predict the fatigue resistance of welded joints on the basis of the local stress/strain field at the weld toe. The study is inspired by a local strain method, the WEL.FA.RE. method, based on the local amplitude of strain εa measured by 3mm grid-length strain gauges bonded with the axis at a 2.5mm distance from the real weld toe. The WEL.FA.RE. method suggests to determine the fatigue limit of welded joints simply by means of an experimental curve and the measurements of the local amplitude of strain εa to the weld toe directly on the structure under service conditions. In this work, both strain gauge and TSA techniques have been used to this purpose. In order to understand the development of the fatigue phenomena, the entire local strain field to the weld toe has been monitored by means of the thermoelastic stress analysis (TSA) technique and the results have been compared to those obtained with strain gauge. Structural steel specimens have been fatigue tested under alternate symmetric loads (tension-compression) and the local strain amplitude to the weld toe has been measured with two experimental technique (strain gauge and thermoelastic stress analysis) and compared in view of choose which one is more suitable for the WEL.FA.RE. method. The analysis of the thermoelastic data has showed that TSA is able to provide adequate spatial resolution to describe the complexity of the strain field along the cord. Furthermore the phase image has turned out to be an effective parameter to assess the crack initiating and growth. So, thermoelasticity has the capacity to be used as a non destructive technique for the evaluation of the structural integrity of the welded joints.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Caterina Casavola, Umberto Galietti, Damiano Modugno, and Carmine Pappalettere "An application of the differential thermographic technique for welded joints fatigue evaluation", Proc. SPIE 6205, Thermosense XXVIII, 62050W (18 April 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.662026
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Temperature metrology

Seaborgium

Stress analysis

Infrared cameras

Calibration

Thermography

Resistance

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