Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations GregLocock on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Allowable Stresses, Sd/St for Titanium Tank 3

Status
Not open for further replies.

sxz

Mechanical
Aug 16, 2005
40
HI, for titanium tank, material B-265 Gr.2, design temperature 261F, can we use the Sd at, 20,600 psi, it is 70% of its yield, 29,700psi? (ASME 8-1 has 12,400 psi). Thanks for any comments.
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

This is yet another, "Do I have permission from eng-tips to pick and chose trules from various codes ?"

What type of tank is this ?.... What is your code of record ?... API-650 ?... API-620 ?.. Something else ?

What is the design pressure ?

Give us a complete description of what you are trying to do ... not a tiny window ....

MJCronin
Sr. Process Engineer
 
MJCronin,

Thank you for your reply.
It is API 650 tank, Design pressure: 0.1 psig. Dimensions ID 40 feet, Height 46 feet, Cone roof. API 650 doesn't cover titanium material, I refer the stress ratio from Appendix S, Table S2.b, and get Sd = 20600 psi. St=36000, B265 Grade 2 has yield: 40,000 psi, tensile: 50,000 psi.
 
The stainless steels in Annex S generally have low yield and high ultimate strengths, relatively speaking, and use allowable closer to yield than would be otherwise allowed. The yield/ultimate of your material do not fit that well. I would consider looking at the CS and aluminum requirements to see how they compare as well.
Ultimately, this should be a contractual issue, as you're building a non-code tank.
 

The subject tank is out of scope of API 65o for temperature and material so , will not be API 650 tank. However, you may follow the standard.

Regarding the Allowable Stress , pls look clause 5.6.2 ..

5.6.2.1 The maximum allowable product design stress,....... The design stress basis, Sd, shall be either two-thirds the
yield strength or two-fifths the tensile strength, whichever is less.
5.6.2.2 The maximum allowable hydrostatic test stress, St,..... The hydrostatic test basis shall be either three-fourths the
yield strength or three-sevenths the tensile strength, whichever is less.

My opinion..







Tim was so learned that he could name a
horse in nine languages: so ignorant that he bought a cow to ride on.
(BENJAMIN FRANKLIN )

 
HTURKAK,

Thank you for your input, if applying the Clause 5.6.2, Sd will be 16,000psi, St will be 21,000 psi.
 
JStephen gives good advice ... Your TI tank is just one step outside of API-650... and because of that..

I strongly suggest that you include the design methodology as an Appendix to your contract documents


If your client wants you do something different, he can say so officially ...

(BTW, I suggest that you develop cost estimates for each and every allowable stress methodology)

Dumb question: If you adopt an aggressive approach (high allowable stress) to design, will you run into fabfrication problems as thin walled Titanium/Stainless steels become much more difficult to weld ?

MJCronin
Sr. Process Engineer
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor