sam031973
Mechanical
- Dec 12, 2015
- 5
Hi,
we had a large diameter steel gas-pipe that was installed in potentially unstable slope area. Our ILI geo pigging inspection data indicated that pipe may have deformed and experienced bending (that results in high stress close to yield) due to ground movement . We decided to mitigate the situation by cutting the pipe to remove the excessive stresses. After unpressuering the pipe and exposing it, we cut the pipe at the segment under concern to releif the excessive stress. Upon cutting the pipe we noticed that the differential movement at the cut section close to 180 mm occurred immediately. The question why such large magnitude-movement occurs..? Given this movement, can one back-calculate the stress existing in the pipe at that section before cutting.
Thanks for your thoughts
we had a large diameter steel gas-pipe that was installed in potentially unstable slope area. Our ILI geo pigging inspection data indicated that pipe may have deformed and experienced bending (that results in high stress close to yield) due to ground movement . We decided to mitigate the situation by cutting the pipe to remove the excessive stresses. After unpressuering the pipe and exposing it, we cut the pipe at the segment under concern to releif the excessive stress. Upon cutting the pipe we noticed that the differential movement at the cut section close to 180 mm occurred immediately. The question why such large magnitude-movement occurs..? Given this movement, can one back-calculate the stress existing in the pipe at that section before cutting.
Thanks for your thoughts