MATEC Web of Conferences (Jan 2019)
Bolt fatigue parametric study of a bolted assembly
Abstract
Structural integrity of aircraft, nuclear power plants, space rockets, ships, automotive structures, biomedical devices, and many other applications, is a major design purpose and concerns various components subjected to cyclic loads for which fatigue is generally the dominant factor leading to its failure. The fatigue damage cumulation phenomenon is a process which may lead to cracks initiation and possibly to the structure failure under the action of variables stresses cycles. The mechanical components are generally subjected to multiaxial stress states. Taking into account this stress states triaxiality generally deals with multiaxial fatigue criteria. They are suitable tools for assessing the material fatigue resistance against periodical stress states, especially when they are multiaxial. The study carried out in this paper aims to analyze the fatigue behaviour of pre-stressed bolts involved in a so-called tee-stub bolted assembly that is subjected to variable loads. A multiaxial fatigue post-processing tool using two multiaxial fatigue approaches (integral approach and critical plan approach) is developed and implemented on Matlab software in order to assess the bolt fatigue damage and then its fatigue life through an iterative process. The tool is validated by fatigue test results on bolted assemblies found in the literature, which are additionally compared with those obtained by standards (Eurocode, VDI). A parametric study on the tee-stub is then performed.