Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

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

Elevated Steel Storage Tanks thickness

Status
Not open for further replies.

SatoshiNakamoto09

Structural
Sep 2, 2014
25
hello can someone give me idea on how to compute the required steel thickness of the plate?

anyone got design experience can share range of possible plate thickness for the steel tank dimension in image below?

or example design of AWWA thickness calculation?

tank_f4gi0b.png
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

All plates shall be a minimum of 2.00 inch thickness ....

MJCronin
Sr. Process Engineer
 
No nozzles?

How is the tank supported?

Welded at the lower ring?

Sitting on discrete supports?

Doesn't look like a standard design to me.

Maybe design as a pressured vessel with only 0.5 bar design pressure?

Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.
 


All plates shall be min. 1/4 in and max. of 2.00 inch thickness ..

Probably the best option, do design calculation as per AWWA D100 and M 42 or ask the services of an experienced engineer on this subject..
 
I originally answered this on the other post, assuming you were looking at an existing tank, but seems this is either a new or hypothetical project.
The AWWA D100 standard gives some requirements for the design, but doesn't give any detailed procedure. In the old days, this was done by fairly approximate methods, accompanied by trial-and-error or strain-gauge analysis as applicable, and involving some conservatism in the code to allow for these methods. In the modern era, I would anticipate finite element work. This is the bowl shape and leg attachments specifically. The shell itself, the roof, and the tower are fairly straight-forward. The companies that do these tanks generally build the same tank portion over and over, so it's not a new design for them each time.
On a tank that low, there normally wouldn't be 4 rows of bracing in the tower. Typically sway rods are used for bracing, not structural members. There usually aren't horizontal members at the bottom as shown there. All of these things can be (and have been) done different ways, though.
Also, on a tank this low, you could accomplish the "elevated" storage by just making a flat-bottom tank 8m diameter by 18m high, which is why you don't see many built this low. The ones that come to mind were either backwash tanks for filters or else steam-locomotive watering tanks.


 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor