Abstract
In order to ensure the dimensional accuracy during welding assembly, external restraints are often used to control welding-induced distortion. The objective of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of external restraints on the reduction of welding distortion in low alloy high strength (LAHS) steel thin-plate panel structures with different plate thickness by means of an integrated computational approach. In the current study, the total deformation of LAHS steel thin-plate welded structure was computed by a two-step integrated computational approach which combines the thermal elastic plastic finite element method (FEM) with the elastic FEM based on inherent strain theory. In the integrated computational approach, the thermal elastic plastic FEM was employed to obtain the inherent deformations of each typical joint involved in the thin-plate welded structure at the first step, and then the elastic FEM based on the inherent strain theory was used to estimate the total deformation of the whole thin-plate welded structure. Firstly, the integrated computational approach was used to simulate the buckling distortion in a thin-plate panel structure, and the corresponding experiment was carried out to verify its computational accuracy. Then, two finite element models with plate thickness of 5 and 12 mm were established to clarify the effectiveness of external restraint on the reduction of welding distortion of the thin-plate welded structures. The simulated results suggest that external restraint could not effectively prevent the occurrence of buckling distortion for the thin-plate structure with 5 mm thickness, while it can reduce the out-of-plane deformation to a large extent for the thin-plate welded structure with 12 mm thickness.
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