01 - Chapter 1
01 - Chapter 1
01 - Chapter 1
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3D Beam Element
A purely mathematical model All behavior is described by end displacements using F=Kx Basic parameters define stiffness and load (K and F, respectively)
Diameter, Diameter wall thickness, and length thickness Elastic modulus, Poissons ratio Expansion coefficient, density
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
3D Beam Element
Behavior is dominated by bending Efficient for most analyses Sufficient for system analysis
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3D Beam Element
Whats missing? g
No No No No No local effects (shell distortion) second order effects large rotation clash accounting for large shear load
Where wall deflection occurs before bending As in a short fat cantilever (vs. a long skinny cantilever)
Centerline support
No shell/wall
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
3D Beam Example
Simple Si l cantilever bending: il b di
= P
L3 3 E I K )
(x = F
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Stress Element
Longitudinal stress
F/A, PD/4t, M/Z (max. on outside surface)
Hoop stress
PD/2t
Radial stress
0 (on outside surface)
Shear stress
T/2Z, (V=0 on outside surface)
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From 3D to 2D
With no radial stress the cube can be reduced to a plane.
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Equilibrium
Stress times unit area = force Any new face must maintain equilibrium New face will have a normal and shear stress component
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Mohrs Circle
Calculation of these new face stresses are symbolized through Mohrs circle
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Any complex stress on an element can be represented by the principal stresses (S1, S2, S3) and/or the maximum shearing stress (max)
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Total distortion of the element causes failure. Octahedral shearing stress (Gmax) is another measure of the energy used to distort the element. This is known as equivalent stress.
Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
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Material Characteristics
Lab produces stress-strain characteristics stress strain for our alloy
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Material Characteristics
Direct (axial) load on a test specimen to yield and ultimate failure Gives E, Sy, Sult These terms vary with temperature
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Lab Failure
If failure occurs at yield, the appropriate stress is calculated using the yield load Sy = Py/a And this is our limit max Sy/2
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Field Failure
If stress of interest (S1, max , oct) on the field element is greater than the lab element, failure is predicted
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More Simple?
Hoop stress (SH) is positive and below y p ( p yield due to wall thickness requirements (design by rule). Radial stress is zero, assume this is S3. Longitudinal stress (SL), assumed positive, must be checked only if it exceeds hoop stress, then S1=f(SL,) and (S1-S3)= f(SL,). So, ith hoop stress accounted with wall S with h t t d ith ll thickness, you need only evaluate longitudinal and shear stresses and compare the results with the material yield, Sy.
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
If SL is negative, then SL becomes S3 and SH is S1. This produces a greater stress intensity of (SH SL). This is a concern for restrained pipe most commonly found in buried piping systems. Otherwise, as long as longitudinal stress is Oh l l d l below yield, the pipe material will not fail.
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Effects of thermal strain were investigated and addressed by A.R.C. Markl et. al. in the late 40s and into the 50s.
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Non-collapse Loads?
Deadweight loads must satisfy equilibrium (F in F=Kx is independent) or collapse. Displacement-based loads such as thermal strain can satisfy static equilibrium through deformation and even local structural yielding. Here, x in F=Kx is independent but material yield will limit K and therefore F.
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Material Fatigue
Polished bar test specimens will fail through fatigue under a cyclic stress The higher the stress amplitude, the fewer cycles to failure
Fig. 5-110.1, Design Fatigue Curves from ASME VIII-2 App. 5 Mandatory Design Based on Fatigue Analysis
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Expansion stress Se f(1 25Sc+1 25Sh) f(1.25S +1.25S ). To address ratcheting, the force-based stress (SL) will reduce this acceptable stress amplitude. Therefore, Se f(1.25Sc+1.25Sh-SL).
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Bend Failure
Pipe bends ovalize as they bend This makes them more flexible And makes them fail sooner than a butt weld
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
Component Fatigue
Markl tested various piping components and plotted their stress and cycle count at failure.
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Stress Intensification
Rather than reduce the allowed stress for the component in question, this SIF (or i) increases the calculated stress. Stress = Mi/Z.
i= S bw S el
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In-Plane/Out-Plane
Process piping distinguished between in inplane bending and out-plane bending In-plane bending keeps the component in its original plane Out-plane bending pulls the component out of its plane
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In-Plane/Out-Plane
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B31.1 Appendix D
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B31.3 Appendix D
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1.368 1.641
1.000 1.167
2.688 2.266
2.215 1.911
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0.365 30 5.193
0.365 50 5.193
Intermediate Calculations tn or tnh = 0.365 r or Rm = 5.193 5 193 tnb = 0.237 rm = 2.132 rp = 2.250 h= 0.070
h=
0.203
0.135
0.406
0.677
1.641
1.167
3.234 3.124
2.688 3.471
2.215 3.471
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To Summarize:
Unchanging loads (loads that do not vary with system distortion weight, pressure, spring preloads, wind, relief thrust, etc.) must remain below the material yield limit. Strain-based loads (thermal growth of pipe, pp ) movement of supports) must remain below the material fatigue limit Several piping codes such as the transportation codes also limit operating stress
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Design by Analysis
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Design by Analysis
The design cycle
Collect data (with assumptions) Generate the model and load sets Run the analysis Check the assumptions Diagnose any problems Re-run with fixes Document the analysis
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
Analyze
Its just F = KX
Evaluate
Check the design limits
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Is It a Good Model?
Focus on stiffness boundary conditions and stiffness, loads. Consider the stiffness method assumptions (remember, its only an approximation). Run a simple sensitivity study when youre unsure.
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
A Sensitivity Study
Treat CAESAR II as a black box. Examine the effects of a single input modification. Determine the sensitivity of the results to that particular piece of data. Examples: nozzle flexibility, friction, support location, restraint stiffness.
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Verifying Results
Equilibrium exists in static analyses.
Resultant loads equal applied loads. Restraint loads for weight analysis sum to total deadweight.
You can verify coordinates of key positions. ii Check the plotted deflections.
13-Feb-08 Introduction to CAESAR II and Pipe Stress Analysis
Design Limits
Pipe failure (stress) Pipe Deflection Equipment loads
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Which Is Better
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Summary
Basic stresses reviewed Failure theories reviewed SIFs introduced Load case (stress) type introduced Expansion case explained Code equations summarized
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