Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel

The aim of the research was to investigate the cyclic plasticity behaviour of a turbine rotor steel through experiments and to simulate low cycle creep-fatigue using a finite element (FE) modelling framework of materials and structures. The cyclic behaviour of FV566 12% Cr martensitic stainless s...

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Main Author: Rae, Yaroslav
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60720/
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author Rae, Yaroslav
author_facet Rae, Yaroslav
author_sort Rae, Yaroslav
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The aim of the research was to investigate the cyclic plasticity behaviour of a turbine rotor steel through experiments and to simulate low cycle creep-fatigue using a finite element (FE) modelling framework of materials and structures. The cyclic behaviour of FV566 12% Cr martensitic stainless steel was studied by performing a series of experimental characterisations. Both mechanical results and microscopic studies were explored. Mechanical tests have been facilitated by conducting low cycle fatigue, creep-fatigue interaction, creep-recovery and anhysteretic tests at high temperature. The effect of low cycle fatigue and creep, and their interactions during combined cycling, have been investigated to improve the understanding of the mechanisms responsible for the mechanical responses and material degradation. The microstructure changes, and deformation mechanisms in particular, were investigated through a series of characterisations by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Investigation of the microstructural evolution and the crack development within the steel was done at different life fractions. The TEM images revealed sub-grain coarsening and reduction of dislocation density during the cyclic tests. The material model used in the FE study is a previously developed improved and unified multi-axial temperature and rate-dependent visco-plastic Chaboche-Lemaitre model which takes into account non-linear kinematic and isotropic hardening. The computational methodology is a three-dimensional framework following an implicit formulation and based on a radial return mapping algorithm. The model was implemented into the Abaqus FE code through a user defined subroutine (UMAT). The UMAT was calibrated and validated across isothermal hold-time cyclic tests. The multi-axial form of the constitutive model developed was demonstrated by analysing the thermomechanical responses of an industrial gas turbine rotor subjected to in-service conditions. The damage development within the turbine rotor was demonstrated. Future work of predicting lifetime of components based on the damage mechanisms is discussed.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:41:24Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-60720
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:41:24Z
publishDate 2020
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-607202025-02-28T14:56:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60720/ Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel Rae, Yaroslav The aim of the research was to investigate the cyclic plasticity behaviour of a turbine rotor steel through experiments and to simulate low cycle creep-fatigue using a finite element (FE) modelling framework of materials and structures. The cyclic behaviour of FV566 12% Cr martensitic stainless steel was studied by performing a series of experimental characterisations. Both mechanical results and microscopic studies were explored. Mechanical tests have been facilitated by conducting low cycle fatigue, creep-fatigue interaction, creep-recovery and anhysteretic tests at high temperature. The effect of low cycle fatigue and creep, and their interactions during combined cycling, have been investigated to improve the understanding of the mechanisms responsible for the mechanical responses and material degradation. The microstructure changes, and deformation mechanisms in particular, were investigated through a series of characterisations by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Investigation of the microstructural evolution and the crack development within the steel was done at different life fractions. The TEM images revealed sub-grain coarsening and reduction of dislocation density during the cyclic tests. The material model used in the FE study is a previously developed improved and unified multi-axial temperature and rate-dependent visco-plastic Chaboche-Lemaitre model which takes into account non-linear kinematic and isotropic hardening. The computational methodology is a three-dimensional framework following an implicit formulation and based on a radial return mapping algorithm. The model was implemented into the Abaqus FE code through a user defined subroutine (UMAT). The UMAT was calibrated and validated across isothermal hold-time cyclic tests. The multi-axial form of the constitutive model developed was demonstrated by analysing the thermomechanical responses of an industrial gas turbine rotor subjected to in-service conditions. The damage development within the turbine rotor was demonstrated. Future work of predicting lifetime of components based on the damage mechanisms is discussed. 2020-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60720/1/Final%20thesis%20Y.Rae.pdf Rae, Yaroslav (2020) Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Unified Viscoplasticity Hysteresis Behaviour High-Temperature Steel Turbine Rotor Finite Element Modelling Low Cycle Fatigue Cyclic Softening Sub-Grain Coarsening Annihilation of Dislocations Martensite Reorientation
spellingShingle Unified Viscoplasticity
Hysteresis Behaviour
High-Temperature Steel
Turbine Rotor
Finite Element Modelling
Low Cycle Fatigue
Cyclic Softening
Sub-Grain Coarsening
Annihilation of Dislocations
Martensite Reorientation
Rae, Yaroslav
Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title_full Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title_fullStr Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title_short Characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
title_sort characterisation and computational modelling of high temperature cyclic viscoplastic behaviour of turbine steel
topic Unified Viscoplasticity
Hysteresis Behaviour
High-Temperature Steel
Turbine Rotor
Finite Element Modelling
Low Cycle Fatigue
Cyclic Softening
Sub-Grain Coarsening
Annihilation of Dislocations
Martensite Reorientation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60720/