LittleInch
Petroleum
- Mar 27, 2013
- 22,512
Hi everyone,
I'm looking for past experience or knowledge of how a double containment or jacketed pipe is designed, tested and certified in the US (or anywhere else for that matter).
Details as much as I can disclose.
It's a metal (Carbon steel) pipe in pipe pipeline (i.e. outside of the plant fenceline) a few kms long (<10). Inner pipe 8",Outer 12". The design pressure is 250 psig. The intention of the annulus is to insulate the inner pipe with material which can't be allowed to get wet. The inner pipe has a hoop stress value <20% of SMYS. The owner currently wants the outer pipe to be double containment in the event of failure of the inner pipe, so the outer pipe has the same design pressure.
This is being designed to B31.4 and is covered I understand by CFR49 part 195.
The dilemma or issue at hand is how to pressure test the outer pipe. Double containment or jacketed pipe doesn't seem to appear in any piping or pipeline code I've seen and hence the issues of:
1) Inner pipe collapse or
2) Can't hydrotest the outer pipe (and would be difficult to drain it even without the insulation issue)
are not addressed anywhere.
I'm recommending writing a deviation to test the outer pipe to 100 psig in air whilst also pressurising the inner pipe to the same or higher pressure to prevent collapse and adding extra testing of the welds and pipe before construction. Can't think of anything more at the moment.
The latest B31.4 (2019) allows a leak test for pipes with a stress value of <20% SMYS, but the current version really doesn't change much between a strength test and a leak test. Specifically if your test pressure of 1.25 x DP is more than 100 psi (ours will be), it specifically excludes a pneumatic test (!). Previous versions of B 31.4 didn't have that wording.
The CFR similarly has no wording to deal with this.
How has anyone tested the outer pipe for e.g. steam jacketed pipe?
Any other experience of double containment pipe testing you can share?
Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.
I'm looking for past experience or knowledge of how a double containment or jacketed pipe is designed, tested and certified in the US (or anywhere else for that matter).
Details as much as I can disclose.
It's a metal (Carbon steel) pipe in pipe pipeline (i.e. outside of the plant fenceline) a few kms long (<10). Inner pipe 8",Outer 12". The design pressure is 250 psig. The intention of the annulus is to insulate the inner pipe with material which can't be allowed to get wet. The inner pipe has a hoop stress value <20% of SMYS. The owner currently wants the outer pipe to be double containment in the event of failure of the inner pipe, so the outer pipe has the same design pressure.
This is being designed to B31.4 and is covered I understand by CFR49 part 195.
The dilemma or issue at hand is how to pressure test the outer pipe. Double containment or jacketed pipe doesn't seem to appear in any piping or pipeline code I've seen and hence the issues of:
1) Inner pipe collapse or
2) Can't hydrotest the outer pipe (and would be difficult to drain it even without the insulation issue)
are not addressed anywhere.
I'm recommending writing a deviation to test the outer pipe to 100 psig in air whilst also pressurising the inner pipe to the same or higher pressure to prevent collapse and adding extra testing of the welds and pipe before construction. Can't think of anything more at the moment.
The latest B31.4 (2019) allows a leak test for pipes with a stress value of <20% SMYS, but the current version really doesn't change much between a strength test and a leak test. Specifically if your test pressure of 1.25 x DP is more than 100 psi (ours will be), it specifically excludes a pneumatic test (!). Previous versions of B 31.4 didn't have that wording.
The CFR similarly has no wording to deal with this.
How has anyone tested the outer pipe for e.g. steam jacketed pipe?
Any other experience of double containment pipe testing you can share?
Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.