hoots711
Structural
- Jan 5, 2006
- 19
Fellow Engineers, I am running into an international difference in steel stack design.
Per the ASME, STS-1, Section 4.4, Eq 4-6, allowable stress cases are only valid when equation 4.6 is satisfied.
4-6 states that t/D <= 10Fy/E
basically, it limits your thickness based on diameter as Fy and E are going to be constants in my design.
The issue is in design of something like a 1.2M Diameter steel stack that is 40M high (free-standing). Per the above formula/condition, i cant use plate thicker than 15-16mm (after corrosion @ FY=34ksi & E=29Mill) and with that parameter i cannot design the stack to pass the allowable stress cases.
Our foreign counterparts design the above stack with most thickness around or over 20mm over the lower half of the stack.
Before i can debate which method is acceptable i have to understand why on Earth the ASME would be limiting thickness based on D in steel stacks.
The only thing i can possibly think of is that the rolling of thicker plate to smaller diameters could compromise the steel??? If this was the case i would think there would be thorough documentation on the subject. This also apears to not be the case as FY is on the right side of the formula (stronger steel would allow larger thicknesses... not likely a rolling issue)
Im striking out finding anything explaining equation 4-6. Can anyone offer any advice or interpretation?
I guess the basic question is: What do you do when equation 4-6 is not satisfied?
Am i mis-reading something here? I have brough this issue to 3 or 4 of our senior US structural engineers and they have all be puzzled by this (mostly by the fact that they havnt noticed this stipulation in previous designs..)
Why on earth would ASME limit MAXIMUM plate thickness by diameter??
Thanks and Best regards.
Per the ASME, STS-1, Section 4.4, Eq 4-6, allowable stress cases are only valid when equation 4.6 is satisfied.
4-6 states that t/D <= 10Fy/E
basically, it limits your thickness based on diameter as Fy and E are going to be constants in my design.
The issue is in design of something like a 1.2M Diameter steel stack that is 40M high (free-standing). Per the above formula/condition, i cant use plate thicker than 15-16mm (after corrosion @ FY=34ksi & E=29Mill) and with that parameter i cannot design the stack to pass the allowable stress cases.
Our foreign counterparts design the above stack with most thickness around or over 20mm over the lower half of the stack.
Before i can debate which method is acceptable i have to understand why on Earth the ASME would be limiting thickness based on D in steel stacks.
The only thing i can possibly think of is that the rolling of thicker plate to smaller diameters could compromise the steel??? If this was the case i would think there would be thorough documentation on the subject. This also apears to not be the case as FY is on the right side of the formula (stronger steel would allow larger thicknesses... not likely a rolling issue)
Im striking out finding anything explaining equation 4-6. Can anyone offer any advice or interpretation?
I guess the basic question is: What do you do when equation 4-6 is not satisfied?
Am i mis-reading something here? I have brough this issue to 3 or 4 of our senior US structural engineers and they have all be puzzled by this (mostly by the fact that they havnt noticed this stipulation in previous designs..)
Why on earth would ASME limit MAXIMUM plate thickness by diameter??
Thanks and Best regards.