ella0509
Mechanical
- May 19, 2004
- 66
Hi all, hope somebody can give some good pointers. We are looking to use a Titanium Gr.5 (Ti6AL4V)fastener bolt within our assembly that will be in continuous load for >20years (subsea app). I can see that this material suffers from SLC by predominantly the H2 content coupled with temperatures <20C and the sustained load. One way of eliminating/radically reducing the embrittlement risk is to minimise the H2 content possibly by Vacuum annealing the material, I've seen text stating 10ppm is achievable. My supplier states that 60ppm is more their usual requirement and anything lower will be difficult and/or very expensive. Further, more research is stating 50ppm as the 'tipping' point.
If I state material supply to the supplier value of 60ppm, and assuming I can't alter the application service temperature, what else can I do during design analysis to ensure theat SLC does not become a mode of failure - without embarking on some massive test programs. The obvious thing seems to be to reduce the sustained load or stress intensities within the design, but what I'm struggling to find is to what value I need to reduce these to. Can anyone with greater experience of this material and phenomena shed any light? Ti6AL4V ELI (Gr.23?) has been mentioned in pasing as potentially better alternative for this application - again, can anyone tell me why??
Thoughts??
Thanks all!
If I state material supply to the supplier value of 60ppm, and assuming I can't alter the application service temperature, what else can I do during design analysis to ensure theat SLC does not become a mode of failure - without embarking on some massive test programs. The obvious thing seems to be to reduce the sustained load or stress intensities within the design, but what I'm struggling to find is to what value I need to reduce these to. Can anyone with greater experience of this material and phenomena shed any light? Ti6AL4V ELI (Gr.23?) has been mentioned in pasing as potentially better alternative for this application - again, can anyone tell me why??
Thoughts??
Thanks all!