Resumen
The real weld toe geometry is generally not mathematically perfect, resulting in obvious stress concentration effects, both on the weld section and along the longitudinal direction of the weld toe. The true stress-strain state at the local weld toe directly affects the fatigue performance and behavior of the welded structure. Therefore, a Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensor based method for testing the cyclic strain at the weld toe was proposed. Cruciform welded joints were fabricated as specimens on which FBG sensors were arranged at several characteristic points along the weld toe curve. Strains at all the characteristic points under cyclic tensile load were measured and recorded, which showed the proposed measuring method could accurately obtain the complete local strain time histories along the weld toe. The strain time histories clearly reflected the cyclic hardening phenomenon in the early stage and the plastic yielding phenomenon in the final stage. Furthermore, based on the cyclic stress-strain constitutive model of the weld material, the stress-strain response curves of all the characteristic points were drawn. Combined with the fatigue fracture morphology, the mechanism of the unsynchronized initiation of the multiple cracks in the weld toe was investigated.