rkuhn
Mechanical
- Oct 28, 2002
- 21
Hi,
I have a 32" slurry pipe inside a tunnel (2500 m length). The pipe is straight and is anchored in 5 points, evenly distributed. At both end of the tunnel the pipe bends and then get underground.
The weight of the pipe is 600 kg / m
The weight of the internal fluid is 1000 kg /m.
I've used a seismic coeff. of 0.2. So the total seismic axial load is = 0.2 x 2500 x (600+1000) = 800 ton.
The typical thing to do is to divide the seismic axial load in the five anchor points = 800/5 = 160 ton.. (What CAESAR II does)
The question is: The internal fluid should be moved inside the pipe due the axial seismic forces, until it "hit" a bend. So the bend transfer this load to the nearest anchor. This load is higher than 160 ton? I think it is, but I don't know how much.
Thanks
I have a 32" slurry pipe inside a tunnel (2500 m length). The pipe is straight and is anchored in 5 points, evenly distributed. At both end of the tunnel the pipe bends and then get underground.
The weight of the pipe is 600 kg / m
The weight of the internal fluid is 1000 kg /m.
I've used a seismic coeff. of 0.2. So the total seismic axial load is = 0.2 x 2500 x (600+1000) = 800 ton.
The typical thing to do is to divide the seismic axial load in the five anchor points = 800/5 = 160 ton.. (What CAESAR II does)
The question is: The internal fluid should be moved inside the pipe due the axial seismic forces, until it "hit" a bend. So the bend transfer this load to the nearest anchor. This load is higher than 160 ton? I think it is, but I don't know how much.
Thanks