couplandboy1
Civil/Environmental
I'm reviewing a shop drawing from a tank builder which includes a vertical overflow pipe internal to the tank. The pipe will be empty and subjected to varying levels of external hydrostatic pressure varying from 0 feet to, say 20 feet at the bottom of the pipe as the water reaches the overflow weir.
I employed the calculation to calculate at what point the pipe would buckle from external pressure (equation 4-2 from M11). My calculations showed that buckling (for the pipe thickness they propose) could be a problem and I asked for justification.
The issue is what is "uniform and radial". I figured that the maximum "uniform and radial" pressure would occur at the bottom of the pipe. The tank guy contends that "uniform" means applying the average external pressure = (0 lb/sf at the top + max pressure at bottom)/2. Essentially, he's saying that the pipe would need to be horizontal and subjected to that max pressure at every point of the pipe in question.
They provided a justification and ultimately they are responsible so this is a relatively low risk question to answer. There are some flanges and bends that will stiffen the pipe that I acknowledged but didn't account for so I think we'll be fine either way. I am very curious about others' interpretation of "uniform and radial" and would appreciate some thoughts.
I employed the calculation to calculate at what point the pipe would buckle from external pressure (equation 4-2 from M11). My calculations showed that buckling (for the pipe thickness they propose) could be a problem and I asked for justification.
The issue is what is "uniform and radial". I figured that the maximum "uniform and radial" pressure would occur at the bottom of the pipe. The tank guy contends that "uniform" means applying the average external pressure = (0 lb/sf at the top + max pressure at bottom)/2. Essentially, he's saying that the pipe would need to be horizontal and subjected to that max pressure at every point of the pipe in question.
They provided a justification and ultimately they are responsible so this is a relatively low risk question to answer. There are some flanges and bends that will stiffen the pipe that I acknowledged but didn't account for so I think we'll be fine either way. I am very curious about others' interpretation of "uniform and radial" and would appreciate some thoughts.