During the past 25 years, numerous pressure-vessel problems have been solved, but in many instances the solutions have led to other problems. Currently, promising developments in pressure-vessel steels are providing such solutions and such additional problems with respect to fabrication and various failure modes. With respect to fabrication, lamellar tearing is being minimized by special melting and solidification practices. However, continuous casting and electroslag-remelting of slabs are currently limited in plate size that can be produced. With respect to bursting, recent studies indicate that high-yield-strength steels have higher burst-strength indices than lower-strength steels even for vessels with nozzles and with notches up to 25 percent of the wall thickness. Strength and therefore resistance to bursting can be increased without loss in toughness through new control-rolling practices, except that these practices are limited to plates up to 3/4 in. thick. New high-toughness line-pipe steels are now available that should be very attractive for pressure vessels that require very high resistance to shear tearing. These low-sulfur steels may be somewhat impaired by sensitivity to splitting as a result of the control-rolling practice. To date, steels have not been developed with improved resistance to fatigue failure. Fortunately, pressure vessels have rarely failed by fatigue. Similarly, resistance to failure by environmental effects is not basically improved by steel composition. This is usually the result of difficulty in defining the effects of the numerous environments that may be involved. These steel developments promise continued improvement of pressure-vessel performance, but usually are accompanied by problems that present new technological challenges.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
February 1974
Research Papers
Pressure-Vessel Steels: Promise and Problem
J. H. Gross
J. H. Gross
United States Steel Corporation, Monroeville, Pa.
Search for other works by this author on:
J. H. Gross
United States Steel Corporation, Monroeville, Pa.
J. Pressure Vessel Technol. Feb 1974, 96(1): 9-14 (6 pages)
Published Online: February 1, 1974
Article history
Received:
October 29, 1973
Online:
October 25, 2010
Citation
Gross, J. H. (February 1, 1974). "Pressure-Vessel Steels: Promise and Problem." ASME. J. Pressure Vessel Technol. February 1974; 96(1): 9–14. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3454147
Download citation file:
15
Views
0
Citations
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Vorticity Shedding and Acoustic Resonance Excitation of a Square Tube Array: Effect of Flow Approach Angle
J. Pressure Vessel Technol
Optimization of Composite Cylindrical Shell Structures for Hydrostatic Pressure Loading
J. Pressure Vessel Technol
Interpolated Moduli Adjustment Technique for Limit Loads
J. Pressure Vessel Technol
Removal of Cavitation Using HDPE/LDPE Inline Section-Pipe
J. Pressure Vessel Technol
Related Articles
Effect of Strain-Hardening Exponent and Strain Concentrations on the Bursting Behavior of Pressure Vessels
J. Eng. Mater. Technol (October,1974)
Nondestructive Evaluation of FRP Design Criteria With Primary Consideration to Fatigue Loading
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (May,2004)
The Effective Utilization of Yield Strength
J. Eng. Ind (November,1971)
New Method for Design of Flat Steel Ribbon-Wound Pressure Vessels
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (August,1998)