Abstract
BackgroundThe hole-drilling method is a well-known and widely used technique for the determination of residual stresses, but is limited to materials with linear elastic behaviour. This can be a problem when high residual stresses are measured, since a local yielding can occur due to stress concentration around the drilled hole.ObjectiveIf the residual stress exceeds about 80% of the material yield stress, the error caused by the plasticity effect becomes significant. In order to correctly evaluate high uniform residual stresses, a universal procedure for a correction of the plasticity effect is introduced.MethodsThe procedure uses a neural network and is capable of correcting any combination of uniform residual stresses with magnitudes up to the material yield stress. It also covers a wide range of material parameters, hole diameters, and strain gauge rosettes and it is independent of the orientation of the strain gauge rosette.ResultsThe correction procedure was tested by more than a million randomly generated stress states that covered the entire range of input parameters and performs remarkably well, since the error of the corrected residual stresses is negligible even for the states with residual stress magnitudes equal to the material yield stress.ConclusionsThe proposed correction extends the application range of the hole-drilling method to high uniform residual stresses and therefore can be very useful for practical measurements.
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