Faculty Publications

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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.
  • Item
    Failure of hydraulic lathe chuck assembly
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Sondar, P.R.; Gurudath, B.; Ahirwar, V.; Hegde, S.R.
    Present work provides a detailed failure investigation of a hydraulic lathe chuck assembly that comprises a plunger, three jaws, and three jaw-carriers that are made of carburized, tempered and sub-zero treated EN36C steel. The chuck assembly suffered premature failure of the plunger and one of the jaw carriers during the service in a CNC lathe. The investigation comprises a detailed metallurgical failure analysis involving: visual inspection, fractography, metallography, and hardness measurements. The analysis concludes that plunger failed first by fatigue fracture that is originated at a sharp corner of a T-slot. The mating jaw-carrier failed in the next event due to instant misalignment and overstressing during the lathe operation. The investigation concludes that design flaw and improper heat treatment cycle as the reasons for the premature failure of the assembly. Through experimental simulation of the heat-treatment cycles using EN36C specimens, the work suggests that carburizing, cryogenic treatment and then tempering is the proper sequence for achieving the best combination of mechanical properties that should extend the service life of the chuck-assembly. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd