Stress Classes
Stress Classes
Stress Classes
1. Primary stress
a. General:
Primary general membrane stress, P, Primary general bending stress, Pb b. Primary local stress, PL
2. Secondary stress
a. Secondary membrane stress, Q, b. Secondary bending stress, Qb
3. Peak stress, F
Defination
Membrane Stress=any stress which is uniform over the thickness of a thin component Bending Stress=any stress which varies linearly over the thickness of a thin component For general loads that apply more or less uniformly across an entire section, the corresponding stresses must be lower, since the entire vessel must support that loading. local loads, the corresponding stresses are confined to a small portion of the vessel and normally fall off rapidly in distance from the applied load.
Primary stress
Primary Stresses are produced by steady mechanical load excluding discontinuity stresses and stress concentration It is not self limiting It is subdivided into two subcategories General and local
Secondary Stress
Their fundamental characteristic is not to be involved in balancing the forces applied to the vessel, and to be for this reason self-limiting Self equilibrium stresses necessary to satisfy continuity of structure occurs at structural discontinuities can be caused by mechanical load or by differential thermal expansion excludes local stress concentration. Secondary stresses are divided into two additional groups, membrane and bending Secondary membrane stress Thermal stresses , Membrane stress in the knuckle area of the head Secondary bending stress Bending stress at a gross structural discontinuity , Discontinuity stresses at support rings
Peak stress
Peak stresses are the additional stresses due to stress intensification in highly localized areas. They apply to both sustained loads and self-limiting loads There are no significant distortions associated with peak stresses It is an increment of stress over and above the primary and secondary stresses, caused by discontinuities or local thermal stress .It is the highest stress at some local point under consideration Peak stresses are only significant in fatigue conditions or brittle materials. It does not generate any noticeable distortion but it can be a source of fatigue crack or stress corrosion or delayed fracture. Stress at the corner of a discontinuity,Thermal stresses in cladding Stress due to notch effect