Reduced price! WRC 308 View larger

WRC 308

M00000230

New product

WRC 308 Verification and Application of an Inelastic Analysis Method for LMFBR Piping System

Bulletin / Circular by Welding Research Council, 1985

H. D. Hibbit, E. K. Leung

More details

In stock

$23.22

-57%

$54.00

More info

Full Description

This report documents verification and application of a modeling approach to the detailed inelastic analysis of large diameter, thin walled piping configurations typical of liquid metal cooled reactor primary piping, subjected to mechanical loads and thermal shock, with intermediate periods of creep under constant load and temperature. The primary purposes of the project are fourfold: first, to provide verification of the modeling approach; second, to investigate the importance of straight pipe/pipe end interaction effects ("end effects") in realistic cases; third, to demonstrate and compare a more economic analysis method that neglects end effects; and fourth, to show that this level of analysis effort is feasible even for preliminary piping system analysis.

The basic modeling approach has been described and applied to test cases elsewhere. In this report, the approach is first verified by application to the International Piping Benchmark Problem I, the Battelle-Columbus elbow test. These verification studies establish minimum levels of discretization that provide good correlation of detailed local stress and strain predictions with results of other studies of the same experiment. The major part of the report documents the application of the approach to a typical LMFBR primary piping configuration subjected to a realistic design loading transient, and compares results with and without end effects on the pipe bends, as well as comparing results with one independent analysis.

The results suggest that the end effects play a significant role in the response, with the model that neglects end effects providing conservative estimates of the inelastic strains. The analysis without end effects shows some correlation with an independent analysis. Analysis costs are reported in terms of labor content and computer resource usage, and demonstrate the economic feasibility of the approach.