An Assessment on the Plastic Capacity of Pipe-in-Pipe Systems Under Damage Progression Effect

Author:

Davaripour Farhad1,Quinton Bruce W.T.2,Pike Kenton3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ocean & Naval Architectural Engineering, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s, NL A1B 3X5, Canada

2. Department of Ocean and Naval Architectural Engineering, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s, NL A1B 3X5, Canada

3. TechnipFMC, St John’s, NL A1B 3X5, Canada

Abstract

Abstract In recent years, pipe-in-pipe (PiP) systems have been employed in an increasing number of subsea projects. According to the previous studies, the external pressure required to develop the initial local buckle on the PiP system is significantly higher than the pressure required to propagate the buckle along the system. In this respect, it is reasonable to investigate a novel topic where the propagation of buckle is induced by a lateral interference load instead of external pressure (e.g., diagonal fishing gear impact). On this subject, the recent studies showed the progression of plastic damage along a single-walled pipe, which is induced by a lateral load, could significantly lower the load-carrying capacity of the pipe. The present study investigates this finding for a PiP solution under a two-phase loading condition: in phase 1, the PiP solution is subject to 75 mm perpendicular indentation, and in phase 2, the resulting plastic damage in phase 1 is translated and induced longitudinally along the PiP system. Furthermore, using finite element analyses, the effect of combined loading (axial and lateral load) on the load-carrying capacity of the PiP specimen is investigated. The test results show that upon the initiation of damage progression, the load-carrying capacity of the PiP specimen (against the lateral indentation) declines by 10%. Also, the numerical results show that the structural resistance of a PiP specimen against a lateral indentation drops significantly when the inner pipe is subject to axial compression.

Funder

Mitacs

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics

Reference24 articles.

1. Method to Assess the Overtrawlability of Pipe-in-Pipe;Zheng,2014

2. Buckle Propagation in Pipe-in-Pipe Systems. Part I. Experiments;Kyriakides;Int. J. Solids Struct.,2001

3. Buckle Propagation in Pipe-in-Pipe Systems. Part II. Analysis;Kyriakides;Int. J. Solids Struct.,2001

4. An Investigation of the Load Carrying Capacity of Pipelines Under Accidental and Longitudinal Moving (Sliding) Loads;Davaripour,2018

5. Effect of Damage Progression on the Plastic Capacity of a Subsea Pipeline;Davaripour;Ocean Engineering,2020

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