atrizzy
Structural
- Mar 30, 2017
- 362
A client is asking me if they can safely insulate an unlined steel stack and associated helical wind strakes.
A look at STS-1 indicates fairly strict sizing requirements for strake length, and if they add the insulation, this will decrease the projection of the strakes form the side of the stack.
On one hand, I don't see any justification in the code for allowing this. On the other, there will still be a vortex shedding element, just not quite as protrusive as prescribed.
The client wants to do this as they think it will reduce corrosion inside the stack.
Would you permit this? I'm leaning towards telling them that they're on their own with this. Structural engineer here with no knowledge of the basics of vortex shedding analysis.
A look at STS-1 indicates fairly strict sizing requirements for strake length, and if they add the insulation, this will decrease the projection of the strakes form the side of the stack.
On one hand, I don't see any justification in the code for allowing this. On the other, there will still be a vortex shedding element, just not quite as protrusive as prescribed.
The client wants to do this as they think it will reduce corrosion inside the stack.
Would you permit this? I'm leaning towards telling them that they're on their own with this. Structural engineer here with no knowledge of the basics of vortex shedding analysis.