dozer
Structural
- Apr 9, 2001
- 504
I'm not a pipe stress engineer by trade but I like to understand what other disciplines do. I do have a mechanical engineering degree and a strong background in stress analysis. Just a little background for reference. Anyway, I asked one of my associates to run a simple straight length of pipe with a temperature change so I could understand what it is using for the coefficient of thermal expansion. The test case was stainless steel pipe installed at 70 deg F then cooled down to -320 deg F. For those who are curious, these are actually real world numbers for cryogenic processes. I found that even though CAESAR recognizes that the coefficient of thermal expansion (COTE) is a function of temperature (it has a table of COTE at various temperatures) it actually uses the value at the design temperature to do the calculation. For stainless at -320 F the COTE is 8.16E-6 in/in-F. At 70 F it is 9.11 in/in-F. To see how much the pipe shrinks going from +70 to -320 I would have thought it would be more correct to use the average COTE between these two temperatures but CAESAR used the lower value. Granted it's only about a 5% difference, but that doesn't seem right to me. Is this a bug in CAESAR or is this just the way it is done in the piping world?