lewist57
Mechanical
- Jul 18, 2006
- 11
A 90 deg wrought copper elbow had a full circumferential break in the middle of the elbow following the sudden loss of a piping hanger. It has been proposed that the wrought copper elbow had experienced work hardening due to low cycle stresses induced by the copper pipe being too flexible and the piping system experiencing periodic movement events over 10 years. The copper pipe and its support system was to be designed to ASME B31.9 standard.
The simplistic question I have is - what should value or characteristic should the original designer looked for in the original piping stress analysis and support system layout to flag for the potential of work hardening fatigue of the elbow due to low cycle pipe movement over a long period of time? It has been a long time since I have done piping stress analysis, and have never analyzed an ambient temperature copper (Type L) pipe system, just carbon steel steam piping to B31.1 or B31.3.
The simplistic question I have is - what should value or characteristic should the original designer looked for in the original piping stress analysis and support system layout to flag for the potential of work hardening fatigue of the elbow due to low cycle pipe movement over a long period of time? It has been a long time since I have done piping stress analysis, and have never analyzed an ambient temperature copper (Type L) pipe system, just carbon steel steam piping to B31.1 or B31.3.