Abstract

AbstractWelding distortion causes the change of stress distribution of load‐carrying cruciform stainless steel welded joints, and the weld with angle less than 90° between steel plates became the fatigue performance control weld because of stress magnification. The effect of angular misalignment on fatigue performance of stainless steel cruciform welded joint was experimentally and numerically studied. The fatigue damage evolution equations, under different stress amplitudes, were derived using relative deformation increment as damage variable based on continuum damage mechanics to explain the process of damage transformation from micro to macro crack and finally rapid fracture. The hot spot stress magnification factor was positively correlated with the welding distortion angle and exhibited two discernible stages of rise and fall with increasing nominal stress taking the proportional limit as boundary. A proposed formula considering both misalignment angle and applied stress aimed to enhance accuracy in fatigue performance evaluation compared to current methods.

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