FinnB
Structural
- Nov 28, 2002
- 85
I have been asked to look at what happens structurally to HDPE pipes buried in ground subject to heave.
The concern is that a leak in a pipe or from another source could cause the earth around the pipe to heave. The expansive heaving ground is 'Black Cotton Soil' which in this case can heave up to 18 inches exerting upward heave forces of 6500 pounds/foot^2. If the pipe were to heave locally by 12inch it would obviously deform the pipe causing it to deflect, bend, shear and elongate.
I am trying to work out how to analyse this problem. Here's my thoughts so far.
1. While the pipe is deforming as the the ground heaves/moves the pipe is not subject to bending moments as it always supported continouosly by the ground. The pipe never has to span even though it is bent and deformed.
2. I tried placing the pipe on soft springs in a computer model and applied the upward heave force. I was hoping to demonstrate that the pipe would stretch and become longer as the ground heaved. Demonstrating stetching (strain) of the pipe, I was hoping, would result in an axial force/stress that I could compare to the yield stress of HDPE pipe.
3. The software I am using (ROBOT) does not appear to calculate the strains and resulting stresses due to deformations/deflections. Analysing the pipe on elastic springs supports I have let the deflections of the supports in a 20ft length of a 100ft pipe to increase to a point where there is a deformation/delection of 12 inches. Allowing a max vertical deformation of 12 inches in the computer model is not producing axial forces in the pipe and I do think this is realistic.
I'm scratching my head with this one. Has anybody got any views on what happens structurally to a pipe in heaving ground and how the pipe should be analysed. My feeling is that the pipe will be subjected to more than axial forces due to strain but I do not know how to look at this.
I know there will be practical constructions solutions to this problem and I welcome any there are but it is how these pipes should be structurally analysed is the task I have been given to do.
The concern is that a leak in a pipe or from another source could cause the earth around the pipe to heave. The expansive heaving ground is 'Black Cotton Soil' which in this case can heave up to 18 inches exerting upward heave forces of 6500 pounds/foot^2. If the pipe were to heave locally by 12inch it would obviously deform the pipe causing it to deflect, bend, shear and elongate.
I am trying to work out how to analyse this problem. Here's my thoughts so far.
1. While the pipe is deforming as the the ground heaves/moves the pipe is not subject to bending moments as it always supported continouosly by the ground. The pipe never has to span even though it is bent and deformed.
2. I tried placing the pipe on soft springs in a computer model and applied the upward heave force. I was hoping to demonstrate that the pipe would stretch and become longer as the ground heaved. Demonstrating stetching (strain) of the pipe, I was hoping, would result in an axial force/stress that I could compare to the yield stress of HDPE pipe.
3. The software I am using (ROBOT) does not appear to calculate the strains and resulting stresses due to deformations/deflections. Analysing the pipe on elastic springs supports I have let the deflections of the supports in a 20ft length of a 100ft pipe to increase to a point where there is a deformation/delection of 12 inches. Allowing a max vertical deformation of 12 inches in the computer model is not producing axial forces in the pipe and I do think this is realistic.
I'm scratching my head with this one. Has anybody got any views on what happens structurally to a pipe in heaving ground and how the pipe should be analysed. My feeling is that the pipe will be subjected to more than axial forces due to strain but I do not know how to look at this.
I know there will be practical constructions solutions to this problem and I welcome any there are but it is how these pipes should be structurally analysed is the task I have been given to do.