Stirling engine - Available tools for long-life assessment
Abstract
A review is presented for the durability approaches applicable to long-time life assessment of Stirling engine hot-section components. The crucial elements are experimental techniques for generating long-time materials property data (both monotonic and cyclic flow and failure properties); analytic representations of slow strain rate material stress-strain response characteristics (monotonic and cyclic constitutive relations) at high temperatures and low stresses and strains; analytic creep-fatigue-environmental interaction life prediction methods applicable to long lifetimes at high temperatures and small stresses and strains; and experimental verification of life predictions. Long-lifetime design criteria for materials of interest are woefully lacking. Designing against failures due to creep, creep-rupture, fatigue, environmental attack, and creep-failure-environmental interaction will require considerable extrapolation. Viscoplastic constitutive models and time-temperature parameters will have to be calibrated for the hot-section materials of interest. Analysis combined with limited verification testing in a short-time regime will be required to build confidence in long-lifetime durability models.
- Publication:
-
Space Nuclear Power Systems
- Pub Date:
- 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991snpw.proc..581H
- Keywords:
-
- Design Analysis;
- Engine Parts;
- Flow Characteristics;
- Gas Turbine Engines;
- Life (Durability);
- Mathematical Models;
- Mechanical Properties;
- Prediction Analysis Techniques;
- Stirling Engines;
- Stress-Strain Relationships;
- Calibrating;
- Creep Properties;
- Creep Rupture Strength;
- Extrapolation;
- Failure Analysis;
- High Temperature;
- Strain Rate;
- Time Temperature Parameter;
- Viscoplasticity;
- Spacecraft Propulsion and Power