Do We Need a Safe Excavation Pressure for Dented Pipelines: How Should it Be Defined?

Muntaseer Kainat, Doug Langer, S. Hassanien
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Abstract

Pipeline operators’ utmost priority is to achieve high safety measures during the lifecycle of pipelines including effective management of integrity threats during excavation and repair processes. A single incident pertaining to a mechanical damage in a gas pipeline has been reported previously which resulted in one fatality and one injury during investigation. Some operators have reported leaking cracks while investigating rock induced dents. Excavation under full operating pressure can lead to changes in boundary conditions and unexpected loads, resulting in failure, injuries, or fatalities. In the meantime, lowering operating pressure during excavation can have a significant impact on production and operational availability. The situation poses two conflicting objectives; namely, maximizing safety and maximizing operational availability. Current pipeline regulations require that operators have to ensure safe working conditions by depressurizing the line to a level that will not cause a failure during the repair process. However, there are no detailed guidelines on how an operator should determine a safe excavation pressure (SEP) level, which could lead to engineering judgment and subjectivity in determining such safety level. While the pipeline industry relies on well-defined fitness for purpose analyses for threats such as crack and corrosion, there is a gap in defining a fitness for purpose for dents and dents associated with stress riser features in order to set an SEP. Stress and strain based assessment of dents can be used in this matter; however, it requires advanced techniques to account for geometric and material nonlinearity. Additionally, loading and unloading scenarios during excavation (e.g. removal of indenter, overburden pressure, etc.) drive a change in the boundary conditions of the pipe that could lead to leakage. Nevertheless, crack initiation or presence within a dent should be considered, which requires the incorporation of crack geometry and application of fracture mechanics in assessing a safe excavation pressure. Recently, there have been advancements in stress and strain based finite element analysis (FEA) of dents coupled with structural reliability analysis that can be utilized to assess SEP. This paper presents a reliability-based approach to determine a safe excavation pressure for dented liquid pipelines. The approach employs nonlinear FEA to model dents interacting with crack features coupled with uncertainties associated with pipe properties and in-line-inspection information. A fracture mechanics-based limit state is formulated to estimate the probability of failure of dents associated with cracks at different levels of operating pressure during excavation. The application of the developed approach is demonstrated through examples within limited scope. Recommended enhancements and future developments of the proposed approach are also discussed.
凹陷管道是否需要安全开挖压力:如何确定?
管道运营商的首要任务是在管道的生命周期内实现高安全措施,包括在挖掘和修复过程中有效管理完整性威胁。在调查期间,以前曾报告过一起与天然气管道机械损坏有关的单一事件,造成一人死亡和一人受伤。一些作业者在调查岩石引起的凹痕时报告了泄漏裂缝。在全工作压力下的挖掘会导致边界条件的变化和意外载荷,从而导致破坏、伤害或死亡。同时,在开挖过程中降低作业压力会对生产和作业有效性产生重大影响。这种情况提出了两个相互冲突的目标;也就是说,最大化安全性和最大化操作可用性。目前的管道法规要求操作人员必须通过将管道减压到不会在维修过程中导致故障的水平来确保安全的工作条件。然而,对于运营商如何确定安全开挖压力(SEP)水平,目前尚无详细的指导方针,这可能导致在确定安全水平时的工程判断和主观性。虽然管道行业依赖于对裂缝和腐蚀等威胁进行明确定义的适应度分析,但为了设定SEP,在定义凹痕和与应力隔水管特征相关的凹痕的适应度方面存在空白。然而,它需要先进的技术来解释几何和材料非线性。此外,开挖过程中的加载和卸载情况(例如移除压头、覆盖层压力等)会改变管道的边界条件,从而可能导致泄漏。然而,应考虑裂纹的萌生或凹痕内的存在,这需要在评估安全开挖压力时结合裂纹几何和断裂力学的应用。近年来,基于应力和应变的凹痕有限元分析(FEA)与结构可靠性分析相结合,可用于评估SEP。本文提出了一种基于可靠性的方法来确定凹痕液体管道的安全开挖压力。该方法采用非线性有限元法对凹痕进行建模,凹痕与裂纹特征相互作用,并与管道性能和在线检测信息相关的不确定性相结合。建立了基于断裂力学的极限状态,以估计开挖过程中不同操作压力下凹痕与裂纹相关的破坏概率。通过有限范围内的实例说明了所开发方法的应用。还讨论了建议的改进和拟议方法的未来发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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