Abstract

In seismic-active area, the buried pipeline is subjected to the axial tensile load exceeding the yield stress of pipe material due to the lateral flow induced by soil liquefaction. Designing a girth weld joint that does not fracture at girth weld but base metal which has high elongation capacity is feasible to ensure adequate ground displacement absorbing capacity of the girth weld joint. However, as for fine grain steel, the heataffected zone (HAZ) is softened by welding heat input, and then, the zone of softened HAZ can be the origin of fracture under tensile load. The apparent strength of softened HAZ is affected by the plastic constraint from the surrounding weld metal and base metal during tensile loading, and the fracture location depends on the apparent strength of HAZ. This study investigates the tensile strength and fracture location of girth weld joints with softened HAZ in the static tensile test. The effect of geometric and mechanical heterogeneity of HAZ, strength overmatching of weld metal, and the width-thickness ratio of tensile test specimen on tensile strength are elucidated using parametric finite element analysis. Subsequently, an equation is proposed to predict the tensile strength and fracture location of the welded joint. Using the proposed equation, the condition of geometric and mechanical heterogeneity of the weld to confirm the girth weld joints that fracture at base metal under tensile load is clarified. The proposed equation can be used to design a girth weld joint with liquefaction earthquake resistance.

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