Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations

Remaining strength estimation of corroded pipelines is a major consideration in pipeline integrity management. The loss of pipe wall thickness due to corrosion inevitably leads to a reduction in the pipeline’s strength and ability to sustain a design pressure. If corrosion defects are closely spaced...

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Main Authors: K.U. Amandi, E.O. Diemuodeke, T.A. Briggs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1663682
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spelling doaj-e83d35b3e4734a1eb2895b36d71496632021-03-02T14:46:50ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Engineering2331-19162019-01-016110.1080/23311916.2019.16636821663682Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operationsK.U. Amandi0E.O. Diemuodeke1T.A. Briggs2University of Port HarcourtUniversity of Port HarcourtUniversity of Port HarcourtRemaining strength estimation of corroded pipelines is a major consideration in pipeline integrity management. The loss of pipe wall thickness due to corrosion inevitably leads to a reduction in the pipeline’s strength and ability to sustain a design pressure. If corrosion defects are closely spaced, the corrosion feature may interact, resulting in failure pressure lower than would be expected if the defects were evaluated as separate flaws. In such a situation, industry methods for remaining strength calculation have been shown to be conservative. This present work presents a new model that improves the current methodologies for estimating the remaining strength of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects, utilizing a finite element analysis approach in combination with curve fitting. The new model demonstrates the potentials of improved estimation of the remaining strength over the existing industry models. The implication is that the presented model has the potentials of reducing the conservatism inherent in the existing models for estimating the remaining strength of oil and gas pipelines.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1663682remaining strength estimationcorroded pipelinespipeline integrity managementfinite element analysisinteracting defectsoil and gas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K.U. Amandi
E.O. Diemuodeke
T.A. Briggs
spellingShingle K.U. Amandi
E.O. Diemuodeke
T.A. Briggs
Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
Cogent Engineering
remaining strength estimation
corroded pipelines
pipeline integrity management
finite element analysis
interacting defects
oil and gas
author_facet K.U. Amandi
E.O. Diemuodeke
T.A. Briggs
author_sort K.U. Amandi
title Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
title_short Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
title_full Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
title_fullStr Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
title_full_unstemmed Model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
title_sort model for remaining strength estimation of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects for oil and gas operations
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Engineering
issn 2331-1916
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Remaining strength estimation of corroded pipelines is a major consideration in pipeline integrity management. The loss of pipe wall thickness due to corrosion inevitably leads to a reduction in the pipeline’s strength and ability to sustain a design pressure. If corrosion defects are closely spaced, the corrosion feature may interact, resulting in failure pressure lower than would be expected if the defects were evaluated as separate flaws. In such a situation, industry methods for remaining strength calculation have been shown to be conservative. This present work presents a new model that improves the current methodologies for estimating the remaining strength of a corroded pipeline with interacting defects, utilizing a finite element analysis approach in combination with curve fitting. The new model demonstrates the potentials of improved estimation of the remaining strength over the existing industry models. The implication is that the presented model has the potentials of reducing the conservatism inherent in the existing models for estimating the remaining strength of oil and gas pipelines.
topic remaining strength estimation
corroded pipelines
pipeline integrity management
finite element analysis
interacting defects
oil and gas
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1663682
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