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Radial stress
Stress in a direction radial to the axis of symmetry From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Radial stress is stress toward or away from the central axis of a component.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2009) |
Pressure vessels
The walls of pressure vessels generally undergo triaxial loading. For cylindrical pressure vessels, the normal loads on a wall element are longitudinal stress, circumferential (hoop) stress and radial stress.
The radial stress for a thick-walled cylinder is equal and opposite to the gauge pressure on the inside surface, and zero on the outside surface. The circumferential stress and longitudinal stresses are usually much larger for pressure vessels, and so for thin-walled instances, radial stress is usually neglected.
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Formula
The radial stress for a thick walled pipe at a point from the central axis is given by
where is the inner radius, is the outer radius, is the inner absolute pressure and is the outer absolute pressure.[1] Maximum radial stress occurs when (at the inside surface) and is equal to gauge pressure, or .[2]
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References
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