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Experimental and stochastic approaches to assessing the strain demand of pipelines and flexibility requirements for coatings

conference contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Michal, Thomas Hallifax Ballinger, Davi Abreu, Mike Yongjun TanMike Yongjun Tan
A criterion for selecting a coating for an energy pipeline is that the coating should have a suitable flexibility to meet the high strain demand during hydrostatic testing and during field bending. This requires knowledge of the level of strain demand for the pipeline, and also the maximum strain that could be
tolerated by the coating system. Whereas average strains imposed during manufacturing and construction are reasonably well predicted, there is insufficient understanding on the factors leading to localised deformation of the pipe. Significant work has been carried out in the past to develop tests for assessing
the coatings’ ability to handle a certain amount of strain based on bend testing, tensile testing and burst testing. However, there is a concern as to whether these tests properly represent localised micro-strains associated with construction activities including field bending and pressure testing, particularly pressure testing of pipelines designed for operation at 80% of specified minimum yield strength (SMYS). Consequently coatings considered "suitable" for modern pipelines may fail. The first issue discussed in this paper is main factors affecting strain localisation. The non-deterministic distributions of heterogeneities over the pipe provide a ground to consider the mechanisms of localisation as a stochastic process. An approach is proposed to quantify the maximum localised strain demand through cold field bending and hydrostatic experiments. Another issue discussed in this paper is the experimental assessment of coating flexibility under the effects of localised strains. Preliminary mandrel tests have been carried out to assess the uniformity of the imposed strain. Although mandrel testing has been shown to be a useful method for relative comparison of coating flexibility, it has several weaknesses that could significantly affect the reliability and reproducibility of the results.

History

Event

Pipeline Research. Conference (19th : 2013 : Sydney, NSW)

Pagination

1 - 13

Publisher

The Australian Pipeline Industry Association

Location

Sydney, NSW

Place of publication

Barton, ACT

Start date

2013-04-29

End date

2013-05-03

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2013, The Australian Pipeline Industry Association

Title of proceedings

19th Biennial Joint Technical Meeting on Pipeline Research

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