sgdon
Structural
- Nov 25, 2002
- 36
Dear all
From a survey report of a subsea pipeline, i am managed to read off the weight of the pipe in per metre run (say X). This weight has taken account of the various components of the composite pipes (i.e. concrete, steel and anti corrosion coating etc) and the buoyancy.
However, i need the submerged density in kg/m^3 for input into a FE anaysis. How do i go about it. Using X and divide it by either the the steel area (main strucutral component) or the gross area of the composite section seems to yield relatively low density. Is this the right way to do it?
(Submerged weight is approximately 176 kg/m and the steel pipe is 665mm and 26mm thick, with a 50 mm concrete coating.)
thanks
sgdon
From a survey report of a subsea pipeline, i am managed to read off the weight of the pipe in per metre run (say X). This weight has taken account of the various components of the composite pipes (i.e. concrete, steel and anti corrosion coating etc) and the buoyancy.
However, i need the submerged density in kg/m^3 for input into a FE anaysis. How do i go about it. Using X and divide it by either the the steel area (main strucutral component) or the gross area of the composite section seems to yield relatively low density. Is this the right way to do it?
(Submerged weight is approximately 176 kg/m and the steel pipe is 665mm and 26mm thick, with a 50 mm concrete coating.)
thanks
sgdon