SOROURA
Mechanical
- Mar 26, 2009
- 16
Of course it is well known that for high temperature service piping (specifically Power Piping), the piping is insulated with a considerable amount of insulation.
If there is a case were we have Main Steam/CRH piping with 165mm-191mm of insulation and, due to a layout problem (interference with a Steel Column) the only solution is to cut through the insulation by as much as 50% at the area of interference (let's say for a length of about a meter or two) to clear the Steel Column (NOTE: this does not mean reducing the insulation thickness to 50%, but just cutting -longitudinally- 50% of the thickness where the pipe and steel are interfering)
My questions are:
1. Since this will definitely result in an unbalanced thermal distribution across the pipe's cross-section, could this induce local stresses in the piping which could be significant?
2. If this could result in excessive local stresses, how can we evaluate these stresses to verify that the piping is not excessively overstressed (i.e. beyond Code Allowables)?
If there is a case were we have Main Steam/CRH piping with 165mm-191mm of insulation and, due to a layout problem (interference with a Steel Column) the only solution is to cut through the insulation by as much as 50% at the area of interference (let's say for a length of about a meter or two) to clear the Steel Column (NOTE: this does not mean reducing the insulation thickness to 50%, but just cutting -longitudinally- 50% of the thickness where the pipe and steel are interfering)
My questions are:
1. Since this will definitely result in an unbalanced thermal distribution across the pipe's cross-section, could this induce local stresses in the piping which could be significant?
2. If this could result in excessive local stresses, how can we evaluate these stresses to verify that the piping is not excessively overstressed (i.e. beyond Code Allowables)?