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Technical Paper

Using Finite Element Analysis and Metallographic Analysis to Understand Field Forces on an Industrial Head Gasket

1995-02-01
950321
A major concern in head gasket reliability of an industrial diesel engine is flange cracking. This paper will discuss head gasket flange cracking and the head gasket joint environment as they relate to an industrial diesel engine head gasket joint. The paper will discuss metallographic and finite element analysis of head gasket field failures. The metallographic analysis will discuss the evaluation of production, assembled, laboratory tested, and field tested gaskets. The above will give head gasket designers and engine manufacturers insight into the industrial head gasket joint environment. The metallographic work will explain the method of creating micro sections as well as micro section measurements to aid in the understanding of the head gasket loading.
Technical Paper

Corrosion Fatigue Influence on Gasket Flange Cracking

1993-10-01
932352
This paper discusses corrosion fatigue and the corrosive environment as they relate to an industrial engine head gasket joint. The paper will identify possible corrosive elements which initiate corrosion fatigue failures. The sources of the corrosive elements will be cited with the associated concentration levels. The paper will formulate a hypothesis as to how the corrosive elements are transferred through the engine coolant system. Utilizing a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) and an Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscope (EDX), an analysis of coolant residue at the fracture will show evidence of the corrosive elements to verify the proposed hypothesis. Information from engines in the field will be compared to laboratory engine tests to show how laboratory and field results are significantly different. The main corrosive failure of the engine head gasket is flange cracking.
Technical Paper

An Experimental Investigation of Compressive Behavior of a Gasket Material

1993-03-01
930119
The work presented here experimentally analyzes the compaction behavior of a thin graphite facing gasket material utilizing a new patented lateral displacement fixture. Two constitutive relationships are presented to describe the measured material characteristics, using this new fixture system. The first approach is a more conventional method of taking the load-deformation curve of the material to analyze the stress-strain relationship. The second approach develops the stress-strain relationship using a soils model. The soils model relates the true axial stress to the volumetric strain. The constitutive relationships account for thickness, shape, and surface friction condition variations of the material. To study these variabilities, three thicknesses, two diameters, and two surface friction conditions were considered.
Technical Paper

Reduced Instruction Set Computers Versus Complex Instruction Set Computers for Gasket Finite Element Analysis

1992-09-01
921706
The intent of this paper will be to address the level of performance and cost of the various complex instruction set computers (CISC-80X86) versus the reduced instruction set computers (RISC). The original concept of reduced instruction set computers will be explained. The above information will be contrasted with how the second generation system functions. Once the operations are established, a discussion of operating performance as related to several types of benchmarks will be cited. A typical FEA model will be used as the final benchmark to determine realistic performance versus speed (wall clock time). The final comparison will be of cost.
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