Faculty Publications

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  • Item
    Failure Analysis of Cooling Tower Fan-Arm
    (Springer, 2020) Padasale, B.; Kumar, J.K.R.; Sondar, P.R.; Cadambi, S.; Hegde, S.R.
    This work presents failure investigation of cooling tower fan-arms commissioned in a chemical processing plant. The analysis aims at understanding the mechanism and root-cause of the failure. The investigation involves site visits, microstructural analysis, fracture surface analysis, hardness measurements, numerical stress analysis and experimental simulation. Work concludes that the fan-arms failed due to the lack of post-weld heat treatment, which caused localized stress-corrosion and pitting at critical locations that served as crack initiation sites. Fatigue loading condition and presence of residual stresses at the weld enabled easy propagation of cracks that led to recurring premature failure. Based on the root-cause and the mechanism identified in this analysis, proper pre-heating and post-weld heat treatment is recommended to relieve the residual stresses at the critical locations and thus to avoid/minimize such recurring failures in future. © 2020, ASM International.
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    Failure Analysis of a Bucket Elevator Shaft
    (Springer, 2021) Gurudath, B.; Kumawat, K.K.; Tejaswi, V.; Sondar, P.R.; Rakshan Kumar, J.K.; Hegde, S.R.
    Present work investigates the in-service break down of a bucket elevator in a chemical processing plant. The elevator was used for lifting bulk Di-Ammonium Phosphate and broke down due to premature failure of a shaft made of EN19 steel. The investigation comprises a detailed metallurgical failure analysis involving site visit, visual inspection, fractography, and metallography. The investigation reveals that, about 2 years prior to the failure, the shaft was tack-welded to the sprocket hub and a gib-head key near the keyway to avoid the frequent loosening of the key. The inspection during the site visit confirms that the shaft-sprocket assembly was subjected to in-service jerky loading condition along with uneven stress distribution due to misaligned counterweight. The investigation concludes that a crack was initiated in the shaft at the heat affected zone of the tack-welded spot, propagated transversely by fatigue due to in-service cyclic loading, and terminated catastrophically by a brittle fracture during the service. Tack welding, coupled with uneven stress distribution in the shaft due to misaligned counterweight system, is adjudged the root cause of this failure. Suitable remedial measures are suggested to avoid such a failure in the future. © 2021, ASM International.
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    Failure analysis of a fire water jockey pump shaft
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Padasale, B.; Kulkarni, G.S.; Rakshan Kumar, J.K.; Cadambi, S.; Hegde, S.R.
    This work presents failure investigation of a fire water jockey pump shaft that is installed in the fire-station of a petrochemical plant. The jockey pump is driven by a 130 kW motor at about 1480 RPM whose shaft and the coupling key are made of 40C8 steel and 55C8 steel respectively. The drive-shaft of one of the pumps fractured after running for approximately 110 h, while its twin remained functional. The failure analysis involves visual inspection, hardness measurements, metallography, fractography, analytical design calculations, and numerical stress analysis. The analysis concludes that usage of square-ended key in the round-ended keyway is the primary cause, and usage of dissimilar materials for the shaft and the key is the secondary cause for the premature failure. The present work recommends a modified key design and use of the same grade of steel for both the shaft and the key to avoid such failures in the future. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
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    Failure of Soap Extruder Bolt Assembly
    (Springer, 2023) Kumar, J.K.R.; Mogra, N.; Padasale, B.; Dsilva, P.C.; Sondar, P.; Hegde, S.R.
    Present work investigates failure of EN8 steel bolt in a bolt–pin assembly that was used as a fastener in an industrial soap extruder. Unexpectedly, EN19 steel pin that is supposedly the sacrificial element in the assembly remained intact. The investigation follows standard failure-analysis procedure comprising, site-visit, visual inspection, metallography, mechanical-testing, design-analysis, numerical stress-analysis, and fractography. The design-analysis finds that the materials of construction were mistakenly swapped between the pin and the bolt that caused plastic-deformation, necking, and eventual failure of the bolt during operational peak-loading condition. The numerical stress analysis illustrates that the bolts failed at the thread-root region that acted as the stress-raiser. Additionally, the investigation finds that poor-quality machining left-behind jagged thread-root profile that increased the stress-concentration furthermore. The metallography and the fractography indicate that a transverse crack that was initiated at poorly machined thread-root led to the brittle fracture of the bolt. The investigation illustrates how human errors can cause recurring failure of critical components leading to production losses and makes suitable recommendations to prevent such failures in the future. © 2023, ASM International.