SKD_BW
Marine/Ocean
- Apr 10, 2019
- 17
Hi all,
I recently submitted a surcharge load assessment for a high pressure gas main and although the assessment was approved by by the asset owner, I was informed by there lead engineer that the assessment did not make allowances for the residual stresses caused due to the pipe being installed in an open trench. He remarked that the stresses where only minor (approx 8MPa in this case), and would not cause the pipe to be over utilised so he was happy to approve the design submission.
I am now looking at another HP gas crossing which has a higher utilisation, hence I want to include this as part of the Von Mises stress calculation to ensure it is not over utilised, however I am having trouble following the direction given in the specification and I was wondering if anyone had any experience with this? The specification used thus far was NEN3650-1:2003 (Requirements for pipeline systems - Part 1). The spec deals with this specifically in section D3.4 - "stresses due to external load with pipelines installed in a trench". The specification states that stresses due to settlement differences should be taken into account. Can anyone elaborate on this?
I am assuming this is due to the fact that the pipe could be laid on rock, which would then cause differential settlement in the pipe and consequently residual stresses. I am also assuming that there will be some reduction in horizontal pipe support with the pipe being installed in a trench (as opposed to trenchless installation), which could also cause residual stresses. Are either of these assumptions valid, and if so how do I calculate the resultant stresses?
Apologies for rambling and thanks in advance for your help, this has been puzzling me for a couple of weeks now and I am sure there is something glaringly obvious that I am missing but I can't for the life of me get to the bottom of it. I am happy to read any book / specification on the subject if anyone can recommend a good source on the topic.
Much appreciated!!
I recently submitted a surcharge load assessment for a high pressure gas main and although the assessment was approved by by the asset owner, I was informed by there lead engineer that the assessment did not make allowances for the residual stresses caused due to the pipe being installed in an open trench. He remarked that the stresses where only minor (approx 8MPa in this case), and would not cause the pipe to be over utilised so he was happy to approve the design submission.
I am now looking at another HP gas crossing which has a higher utilisation, hence I want to include this as part of the Von Mises stress calculation to ensure it is not over utilised, however I am having trouble following the direction given in the specification and I was wondering if anyone had any experience with this? The specification used thus far was NEN3650-1:2003 (Requirements for pipeline systems - Part 1). The spec deals with this specifically in section D3.4 - "stresses due to external load with pipelines installed in a trench". The specification states that stresses due to settlement differences should be taken into account. Can anyone elaborate on this?
I am assuming this is due to the fact that the pipe could be laid on rock, which would then cause differential settlement in the pipe and consequently residual stresses. I am also assuming that there will be some reduction in horizontal pipe support with the pipe being installed in a trench (as opposed to trenchless installation), which could also cause residual stresses. Are either of these assumptions valid, and if so how do I calculate the resultant stresses?
Apologies for rambling and thanks in advance for your help, this has been puzzling me for a couple of weeks now and I am sure there is something glaringly obvious that I am missing but I can't for the life of me get to the bottom of it. I am happy to read any book / specification on the subject if anyone can recommend a good source on the topic.
Much appreciated!!