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A risk assessment method for multi-site damage

Posted on:1998-08-15Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Texas at AustinCandidate:Millwater, Harry Russell, JrFull Text:PDF
GTID:1462390014477275Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
This research focused on developing probabilistic methods suitable for computing small probabilities of failure, e.g., 10{dollar}sp{lcub}-6{rcub}{dollar}, of structures subject to multi-site damage (MSD). MSD is defined as the simultaneous development of fatigue cracks at multiple sites in the same structural element such that the fatigue cracks may coalesce to form one large crack. MSD is modeled as an array of collinear cracks with random initial crack lengths with the centers of the initial cracks spaced uniformly apart. The data used was chosen to be representative of aluminum structures. The structure is considered failed whenever any two adjacent cracks link up.; A fatigue computer model is developed that can accurately and efficiently grow a collinear array of arbitrary length cracks from initial size until failure. An algorithm is developed to compute the stress intensity factors of all cracks considering all interaction effects.; The probability of failure of two to 100 cracks is studied. Lower bounds on the probability of failure are developed based upon the probability of the largest crack exceeding a critical crack size. The critical crack size is based on the initial crack size that will grow across the ligament when the neighboring crack has zero length. The probability is evaluated using extreme value theory.; An upper bound is based on the probability of the maximum sum of initial cracks being greater than a critical crack size.; A weakest link sampling approach is developed that can accurately and efficiently compute small probabilities of failure. This methodology is based on predicting the weakest link, i.e., the two cracks to link up first, for a realization of initial crack sizes, and computing the cycles-to-failure using these two cracks. Criteria to determine the weakest link are discussed. Probability results using the weakest link sampling method are compared to Monte Carlo-based benchmark results. The results indicate that very small probabilities can be computed accurately in a few minutes using a Hewlett-Packard workstation.
Keywords/Search Tags:Small probabilities, Cracks, Critical crack size, Failure, Weakest link, Using
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