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Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH, Germany Abstract Fatigue analysis of welded joints often requires the handling of large structures, since typical weld seams are small details in large assemblies. FE models deduced from the global structure require idealization and are not well suited for fatigue concepts that are based on the local stress state. The model of the global structure is used to locate hot spots and to transfer the applied loads to a local deformation. The analysis concepts proposed by the IIW and other organizations require a very detailed and specific representation of the welded joints. ANSYS Workbench preprocessing capabilities combined with ANSYS submodeling technology allow demonstrating a fast and reliable workflow. The ANSYS Workbench Fatigue tool performs the high cycle fatigue life calculation. Introduction Over the last decades, numerous concepts have evolved for Fatigue analysis of welded assemblies. The traditional approach is to analyze the fatigue life based on the nominal stress concept. This concept derives the stress state at the weld seam according to a beam theory approach. The Forces and Moments acting on a certain cross section are divided by the section properties to yield the nominal membrane and bending stress. This approach however is limited. The stress state is defined according to a nominal cross section and the fatigue properties are taken from tabulated geometric constellations, the FAT classes. Complicated geometries often do not allow defining a nominal cross section and the stress state is often not just a pure combination of membrane and bending stress. Also, the geometric constellation of the structure might not fit into one of the FAT classes. In the recent years, other concepts have been developed to address those limitations. The extrapolation concept proposed by the IIW and other institutes derives the stress state from a numerical FE stress result and thus eliminates the need to define a nominal cross section. The stress is evaluated at certain distances away from the weld and then extrapolated towards the critical spot. Thus there is no need to model the weld seam itself. The evaluated stress state is not limited to membrane and bending stress. The IIW approach is well proven and supported by a large amount of test data, thus being widely accepted in the industry and by the certification authorities. However, the preprocessing effort imposed on the analyst to follow those concepts may be quite substantial, since they require a very distinct type of Shell or Solid modeling. The effective notch stress concept offers a different approach to analyze the stress state at the weld seam. This concept is based on a volumetric representation of the weld seam geometry. The representation differs among concepts, the most prominent being the R1MS concept. The process starting from CAD Geometry to the determination of fatigue life requires extensive preprocessing and computing resources. The required number of DOF may largely exceed those for the nominal stress or the extrapolation concept, but it offers a quick and comprehensible workflow to the analyst. Submodeling – The analysis concept to cope with large structures Structural analysts that are doing fatigue calculations on large structures have always faced the problem of FE models that grow beyond any reasonable DOF limit. This is due to the fact that the global model stiffness has to be reflected to a certain level of accuracy. The accuracy of the global deformation state affects the local stress state and thus largely influences the accuracy of fatigue life prediction. The accuracy of the local stress state itself crucially depends on the local mesh density, which is imposing tough 2006 Stuttgart, Germany ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006 Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

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Page 1: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment

Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn

ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH, Germany

Abstract

Fatigue analysis of welded joints often requires the handling of large structures, since typical weld seams

are small details in large assemblies. FE models deduced from the global structure require idealization and

are not well suited for fatigue concepts that are based on the local stress state. The model of the global

structure is used to locate hot spots and to transfer the applied loads to a local deformation. The analysis

concepts proposed by the IIW and other organizations require a very detailed and specific representation of

the welded joints. ANSYS Workbench preprocessing capabilities combined with ANSYS submodeling

technology allow demonstrating a fast and reliable workflow. The ANSYS Workbench Fatigue tool

performs the high cycle fatigue life calculation.

Introduction

Over the last decades, numerous concepts have evolved for Fatigue analysis of welded assemblies. The

traditional approach is to analyze the fatigue life based on the nominal stress concept. This concept derives

the stress state at the weld seam according to a beam theory approach. The Forces and Moments acting on a

certain cross section are divided by the section properties to yield the nominal membrane and bending

stress. This approach however is limited. The stress state is defined according to a nominal cross section

and the fatigue properties are taken from tabulated geometric constellations, the FAT classes. Complicated

geometries often do not allow defining a nominal cross section and the stress state is often not just a pure

combination of membrane and bending stress. Also, the geometric constellation of the structure might not

fit into one of the FAT classes. In the recent years, other concepts have been developed to address those

limitations.

The extrapolation concept proposed by the IIW and other institutes derives the stress state from a numerical

FE stress result and thus eliminates the need to define a nominal cross section. The stress is evaluated at

certain distances away from the weld and then extrapolated towards the critical spot. Thus there is no need

to model the weld seam itself. The evaluated stress state is not limited to membrane and bending stress. The

IIW approach is well proven and supported by a large amount of test data, thus being widely accepted in

the industry and by the certification authorities. However, the preprocessing effort imposed on the analyst

to follow those concepts may be quite substantial, since they require a very distinct type of Shell or Solid

modeling.

The effective notch stress concept offers a different approach to analyze the stress state at the weld seam.

This concept is based on a volumetric representation of the weld seam geometry. The representation differs

among concepts, the most prominent being the R1MS concept. The process starting from CAD Geometry

to the determination of fatigue life requires extensive preprocessing and computing resources. The required

number of DOF may largely exceed those for the nominal stress or the extrapolation concept, but it offers a

quick and comprehensible workflow to the analyst.

Submodeling – The analysis concept to cope with large structures

Structural analysts that are doing fatigue calculations on large structures have always faced the problem of

FE models that grow beyond any reasonable DOF limit. This is due to the fact that the global model

stiffness has to be reflected to a certain level of accuracy. The accuracy of the global deformation state

affects the local stress state and thus largely influences the accuracy of fatigue life prediction. The accuracy

of the local stress state itself crucially depends on the local mesh density, which is imposing tough

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

Page 2: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

constraints on the maximum element edge length and in consequence to the model DOF number. To cope

with this problem, ANSYS has developed the submodeling technique as an advanced analysis method to

separate the global deformation analysis from the local stress analysis. This concept requires two separate

models. The full model represents the global structure and is used to transform global loads to local

deformation. The submodel represents the local geometric details with an appropriate mesh density. The

submodeling algorithm then interpolates the deformation from the global model to the submodel

boundaries and solves for the local stress state. This method works well for linear static analysis and gives

reliable results, but it requires extensive planning and documentation of the workflow, especially if many

submodels and numerous load cases are involved. Also, the setup of a submodel may take a considerable

amount of time. The submodeling technique naturally requires some interaction with the CAD data, since

the critical spots within the structure are unknown to the analyst prior to solving the full model and

analyzing the global results.

ANSYS Workbench offers a very efficient way of CAD interaction, handling and documenting all data

involved in the analysis. With small APDL enhancements applied to the model tree, the ANSYS

submodeling technique may be combined with the Workbench Geometry handling and process

documentation. Thus, a workflow can be presented that covers the whole process from CAD to fatigue

analysis. The analysis may be performed in 6 steps:

1. Import the model from CAD and defeature using Design Modeler

2. Apply the global loads and solve the global model, identify critical spots using Design Simulation

3. Generate one or more Submodels from original CAD Geometry using Design Simulation

4. Mesh the Submodel, Interpolate the deformation to the cut boundary and solve using Design

Simulation

5. Get the fatigue life according to the R1MS FAT Class using the Fatigue Tool from Design

Simulation.

6. Evaluate other sets of loads, modify the design, modify the type or number of welds – Design

Modeler – Design Simulation

The Key strengths of ANSYS Workbench are its abilities in geometry handling and its robust meshing

technology. Since all Workbench concepts and methods, e.g. the method for applying structural loads, are

based on the Topology of the CAD model and not on its FE representation, Workbench conflicts with the

established extrapolation concepts. Those concepts require the FE Solution to be evaluated at certain node

positions. For fatigue analysis of welded assemblies inside Workbench, a concept has to be chosen that

does not require control of the node and element locations around the hot spot. The effective notch stress

concept is a natural choice for this approach, since it is based on the CAD Topology and not on the FE

representation.

The R1MS concept – fatigue analysis using the effective notch stress from finite element results

FE models without a representation of weld seams naturally do not allow for a direct readout of the hot spot

stress at the weld seam. If the model is made up from shell elements, the stress state may be evaluated at

some distance from the seam and extrapolated. If the model is made up from solids, the missing

representation leads to singular stress states and thus to infinite stresses. In order to allow a direct readout

of the stress state at the hot spot, a general modeling concept has been developed to assure a non-singular

stress state. The R1MS concept represents the weld seam geometry for fillet welds with a chamfer. The

chamfer is dimensioned according to the value of the characteristic length “a”, which is taken from the

construction data. The “a” is the height of an even sided triangle inscribed by the fillet weld. The transition

edge between the chamfer and the surrounding material is smoothed with a radius of 1 mm. Figure 1 shows

an example model for the R1MS concept.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 3: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Figure 1. Sample model with fillet weld model according to the R1MS concept

With this model the singularity is removed from the stress solution and the stress state now may be

evaluated directly from the FE solution. Naturally, an effective notch stress concept imposes tight

constraints on the element size to minimize the discretization error. The R1MS concept recommends using

at least 10 Elements on the 1 mm radius arc to achieve reliable stress results. The resulting stress is

correlated to the expected life by means of a fictitious “weld seam” material. The material data is based on

the result of a large quantity of fatigue test results on different geometry configurations. It consists of a log

stress - log N curve, called the FAT 225 class [2]. The value of 225 refers to a 5% failure probability at 2

million cycles when the notch stress is equal to 225 Mpa. Figure 2 shows the log N – log stress curve for

FAT 225. Any mean stress that might be present is ignored, since the fatigue test results showed that a

positive mean stress does not have a high impact on the fatigue life. This is due to the fact that the

components are usually sharp notched and high residual stresses reside in the material adjacent to the weld

seam.

10 N/mm²

100 N/mm²

1000 N/mm²

1.E+05 1.E+06 1.E+07 1.E+08 1.E+09

log (N)

FAT225

Figure 2. FAT 225 log N – log stress curve used for the R1MS Concept.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 4: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

With respect to Workbench, this curve may be introduced as a new set of material data in the engineering

data tab and used as a basis for fatigue life calculation in the fatigue module (Figure 13).

Sample analysis: fatigue analysis of a tubular welded assembly

This chapter illustrates the proposed workflow on a typical welded assembly that would be difficult to

analyze with a conventional nominal stress approach.

Step 1:build / Import the model from CAD

Figure 3 shows a sample model that has been created using Design Modeler as a CAD program. The

structure is a curved tubular assembly with a regular pattern of joints. It represents a small sample section

of a repetitive structure that forms the track of a rollercoaster. The curvature of the tubes causes some

deviation from a pure bending and membrane stress state in the tube sections when loaded with a service

load like the one shown in Figure 4. The loading on this structure is caused by a trolley rolling along the 2

upside tubes. It is transferred to the larger tube via the joint elements and passed to the supporting structure

(not shown). The loading is generated by a combination of gravity and centrifugal forces.

It is difficult to define a nominal cross section for the application of a nominal stress concept for the weld

seams. The stress state in curved beams is not a pure membrane and bending stress state. Therefore, the

application of the nominal stress concept is questionable. Applicable concepts are the extrapolation concept

and the effective notch stress concept.

Figure 3. CAD Model of a curved tubular assembly – full model.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 5: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Figure 4. Typical loading of the assembly – combined inertia and gravity loading.

Step 2 mesh and solve the global model

For the FE Model setup of the global model, the analyst may choose from 3 alternatives, regardless of the

concept that is envisaged:

1. Create midsurfaces from the solid model and mesh the midsurfaces with shell elements.

2. Modify the CAD geometry with Boolean operations to achieve a structured mesh and form a

single solid part in Design Modeler. Create a solid hexahedron mesh.

3. Do not modify the geometry at all. Mesh the model with Tetrahedrons and model the joints with

surface-to-surface contact.

Alternative 1 requires extensive resources to be spent on the CAD model. Midsurfacing is still not an

automated process and requires a lot of user interaction. The geometric representation of the structure may

also suffer from a certain amount of loss in accuracy. Shell modeling should be chosen on very large and

thin walled assemblies and may often be the only way to proceed on large assemblies.

Alternative 2 requires less user interaction, but still takes a considerable amount of resources that have to

be spent on the CAD side. Since today’s CAD geometry engines are very robust with regard to Boolean

operations, this approach should be chosen in most cases where the geometry will allow sweep operations

for meshing. The model may be meshed as a single part or as a contact assembly. Since submodeling is

envisaged, contact surfaces in the vicinity of the cut boundary should always be avoided.

Alternative 3 does not require any user interaction. This approach should be preferred since it is most

effective. It is only limited by element aspect ratios on thin walled structures and the number of DOF that

can be handled.

The solution derived from alternative 3 proved to work well in most cases without spending any time on

the CAD model. The Submodeling algorithm works well if the regular prerequisites for submodeling are

obeyed [1]. Contact pairs may be part of the interpolated region in the full model. As long as they are

completely enclosed by the submodel cut boundary. Figure 5 shows a sample mesh with surface-to-surface

contact.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 6: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Figure 5. Mesh with Contact for the global model

Step 3: analyze the global model results and identify critical spots

The full model gives a general impression on the structural deflection. The structural result is saved and

maintained in an RST file on the Hard disk drive. The global solution is needed for interpolation of the

submodel boundary conditions. It is also used to find the location of critical spots in the structure.

Evaluation of the global stress state will not lead to a reliable location, since the solution has a lot of

singular stresses and therefore the local mesh density drives the local stress. Therefore, looking at the stress

value is not an effective method. Workbench now offers a graphical representation of the sum of nodal

forces that is transferred through a contact interface. A sample of this plot is shown in Figure 6. This plot is

easy to interpret and offers a reliable way of determining critical locations.

Figure 6. Plot of the contact forces in ANSYS Simulation

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 7: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Step 4 Generate the submodel from CAD data and mesh

Once the critical spots are known, submodels may be created from CAD data using Design Modeler or a

similar CAD program. This is done by simply cutting the model and suppressing the remaining solids. This

process automatically achieves geometrical consistency, since the remaining solid does not change its

reference with respect to the global coordinate system. Since the interpolation is done with reference to this

system, submodeling crucially depends on this geometric consistency. Before the submodel is transferred to

Design Simulation, it has to be modified according to the modeling concept chosen. Figure 7 shows a

submodel that has been modified to suit the R1MS concept. Fillet welds have been added according to the

drawings and a radius of 1 mm has been added along the chamfer edges.

Figure 7: Submodel geometry of a critical structural detail. Weld seam modeling is done according to the R1MS concept

Figure 8:Submodel mesh used for the location of critical spots inside the submodel.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 8: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

The submodel is inserted as a separate branch in the project tree below the global model and meshed with

default mesh settings (see Figure 8), This intermediate step is taken to analyze the local stress state since

the critical spot inside the submodel is still unknown.

Figure 9. Submodel mesh detail using the sphere of influence feature in DS.

Step 5: Interpolate the boundary conditions from the global model to the submodel and solve

The interpolation is done by inserting a small macro into the environment branch of the submodel tree like

shown in Figure 10. This macro clears the database, resumes the full model from the RST file and performs

the interpolation in /post1 (CBDOF command). After that, the submodel is restored, the interpolated

boundary conditions are read and the submodel is solved.

ANSYS Workbench Design Simulation solves the model and performs post processing like on any regular

model. From the interpretation of the resulting local stress state in the submodel, the critical locations may

now be determined. Still, the discretization is much too coarse to accurately predict the fatigue life from the

resulting stress. The R1MS recommendation is to use at least 10 elements in the 1 mm arc, resulting in an

element edge length of less than 0.1 mm. So, a locally refined mesh is needed to proceed with the life

calculation. The “sphere of influence” method of Workbench is ideally suited for the requested type of

mesh. Figure 9 shows the refined mesh on the submodel.

Step 5 is now repeated simply by creating the “sphere of influence” tab on the mesh branch and solve. The

interpolation is now performed on the new FE mesh, since the macro overwrites any files that where

created on a previous run. The interpolation is done from the original RST file, which still resides in the

working directory.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 9: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Figure 10. project tree showing the Macros used for submodeling

Step 6: analyze the submodel solution and calculate the fatigue life

The effective notch stress may now be read from the submodel and compared against the FAT 225 material

data. The useable life calculation may be done by inserting a Simulation fatigue tool into the submodel

branch.

Analysis Results & Discussion

Key strengths of the method:

Model consistency is maintained by using Design modeler to create submodels based on the original CAD

Geometry. Correct position with reference to the CAD coordinate system is automatically assured and may

be checked by displaying the submodel as part of the global model.

The full FE model to determine the deformation field has to be run only once. An arbitrary number of

Submodels may be created and solved by interpolation from one single run of the global structure.

All Submodels may be included in the model tree. Variants may be studied without having to repeat the

whole process. Submodels may be altered thanks to the bidirectional CAD interface to Design Modeler or

other CAD Programs.

The submodeling technique allows comparing different effective notch stress concepts with little additional

effort to judge the reliability of the fatigue life prediction.

Design variants including the submodeling process may be studied without much additional work, since the

process structure is maintained within the Workbench model tree.

Conclusion

ANSYS Workbench offers an effective way to determine the useful life of large welded assemblies The

combination of Workbench Geometry handling and meshing capabilities, the ANSYS Submodeling

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 10: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

algorithm and the R1MS effective notch stress concept form a quick, robust and accurate method for

fatigue analysis on large 3 dimensional structures.

Figure 11. resulting v.Mises Stress on the Submodel in Design Simulation

Figure 12. Stress intensity on the submodel at the critical spot.

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 11: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

Figure 13. Log N log stress curve of FAT225 in Design Simulation

Figure 14. Useable life of approx. 114.000 cycles calculated with the Design simulation fatigue tool

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006

Page 12: Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS ... · Fatigue Analysis of a Welded Assembly Using ANSYS Workbench Environment Klaus-Dieter Schoenborn ANSYS Service @ CADFEM GmbH,

References

[1] ANSYS advanced analysis techniques guide – Chapter 9 – submodeling

[2] European Standard prEN 1993-1-9 EUROCODE 3 – Design of steel structures Part 1.9 Fatigue

[3] International Institute of Welding IIW document XIII-1965-03 / XV-1127-03 – Recommendations

for fatigue design of welded joints and components, A. Hobbacher, University of applied sciences,

Wilhelmshaven

Copyright CADFEM, www.cadfem.de

2006 Stuttgart, Germany

ANSYS Conference & CADFEM Users´ Meeting October 25-27, 2006