vesselguy
Petroleum
- Feb 25, 2002
- 386
Does anyone know or heard of using a "bearing plate" for tanks to distribute the UDL to the soil?
I was totally puzzled a few years ago when a Civil/Structural Engineer, who is responsible for the foundation of the tank I designed and purchased, to add bearing plate (ring) to the underside of my tank to distribute the edge uniformly distributed load. I have never heard of such a thing and is (and still now) not aware of anyone use such a thing under a tank.
She explained to me the reasoning is that the bottom edge of the bottom shell course has to distribute the UDL from the shell weight + roof weight + wind load to the soil and this load has exceeded the max soil-bearing pressure for the site. My main specialty is design of pressure vessels so I quickly understand her reasoning to be same as that used for designing the vessel skirt base plate on a vertical pressure vessel. Now, API-650 do not address this issue. The bottom annular plate per Table 3-1 and paragraph 3.5 sizes annular plate to support a column of water above this plate and that's it. I don't see anywhere in the Standard where my issue is addressed. Note that NO other Civil/Structural Engineer whom I worked with in many EPC have asked for a bearing plate. The bearing plate ended up being a thick ring that is welded directly under the floor plate at the shell the shell to floor junction so that the shell load can be distributed to the soil by the bearing plate.
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Can anyone here tell me if they have encountered this before and discuss the technical merits? Have you provided a bearing plate under your tank before? How does API 650 address this shell line load to the foundation?
I was totally puzzled a few years ago when a Civil/Structural Engineer, who is responsible for the foundation of the tank I designed and purchased, to add bearing plate (ring) to the underside of my tank to distribute the edge uniformly distributed load. I have never heard of such a thing and is (and still now) not aware of anyone use such a thing under a tank.
She explained to me the reasoning is that the bottom edge of the bottom shell course has to distribute the UDL from the shell weight + roof weight + wind load to the soil and this load has exceeded the max soil-bearing pressure for the site. My main specialty is design of pressure vessels so I quickly understand her reasoning to be same as that used for designing the vessel skirt base plate on a vertical pressure vessel. Now, API-650 do not address this issue. The bottom annular plate per Table 3-1 and paragraph 3.5 sizes annular plate to support a column of water above this plate and that's it. I don't see anywhere in the Standard where my issue is addressed. Note that NO other Civil/Structural Engineer whom I worked with in many EPC have asked for a bearing plate. The bearing plate ended up being a thick ring that is welded directly under the floor plate at the shell the shell to floor junction so that the shell load can be distributed to the soil by the bearing plate.
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| |
| |
===================
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------------
Can anyone here tell me if they have encountered this before and discuss the technical merits? Have you provided a bearing plate under your tank before? How does API 650 address this shell line load to the foundation?