4.7 Article

Ultimate bending capacity of spiral-welded steel tubes - Part II: Predictions

Journal

THIN-WALLED STRUCTURES
Volume 102, Issue -, Pages 305-319

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tws.2015.11.025

Keywords

Steel tube; Spiral-welded tube; Tube manufacturing; Buckling; Structural stability; Imperfection sensitivity

Funding

  1. Research Fund for Coal and Steel (RFCS) of the European Commission [RFSR-CT-2011-00034]

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In the second part of this investigation, numerical simulations are conducted using nonlinear finite element simulations, to define the bending strength and deformation capacity of large-diameter spiral welded steel tubes. Under bending loading, the principal failure mode of those tubes is local buckling (wrinkling) of the tube wall, as shown experimentally in the companion paper (Part I) in a series of tests on 42-inch-diameter tubes (Van Es et al., 2015) [1], and this failure mode is explicitly simulated. Initially, a special-purpose numerical simulation of the cold bending process is conducted to calculate the corresponding residual stresses. Subsequently, a comparison with the test data on 42-inch-diameter tubes reported in Part I is conducted, using the actual material properties and initial geometric imperfections obtained from the tested specimens, as well as the residual stresses computed by the numerical process. Finally, a parametric investigation is performed on the influence of material properties, geometric initial imperfections and residual stresses on local buckling of spiral-welded tubes. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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