Health and Structural Integrity of Monitoring Systems: The Case Study of Pressurized Pipelines
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- internal pressure with induced vibrations,
- additional bending stress from the subsoil drop loaded with an internal pressure, and
- the pipeline wall thickness decreases caused by corrosion at the point of additional bending stress with an internal pressure, etc.
- which quantities should be measured continuously by sensors,
- what are their permissible limit values for a safe operation of the pipeline systems, and
- how to predict the corrosion process and its synergy with additional bending loading.
2. Methodology and Results
2.1. Vibrations Induced in the Side Branches
- the gas flow rate is sufficiently high,
- there are necessary fluid and geometric conditions for the generation of excited pressure oscillations, and
- there was a resonant match between the excitation frequency and the natural frequency of the closed tap volume (existence of Helmholtz standing waves in the branch—the so-called “whistle effect”).
- to determine cyclic properties of the critical volume of the material (often the weld joint) and
- the condition for assessing the criticality of the vibrations.
- safety in terms of the pressure integrity of the pipe,
- fatigue damage accumulation state [19], and
- vibration permissibility.
2.2. The Additional Bending in Operations of Pressurized Pipelines
2.3. Weakening of Pipe Walls Due to Corrosion
- depth of existing corrosion defect found by pipeline inspection,
- kinetics of corrosion defect development,
- stress-strain state of the pipeline, and
- material properties of the pipeline.
3. Conclusions
- induced vibrations due to fluid-geometry or the work of compressors,
- additional bending loading, and
- corrosion losses of the wall thickness.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Chmelko, V.; Garan, M.; Šulko, M.; Gašparík, M. Health and Structural Integrity of Monitoring Systems: The Case Study of Pressurized Pipelines. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 6023. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10176023
Chmelko V, Garan M, Šulko M, Gašparík M. Health and Structural Integrity of Monitoring Systems: The Case Study of Pressurized Pipelines. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(17):6023. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10176023
Chicago/Turabian StyleChmelko, Vladimír, Martin Garan, Miroslav Šulko, and Marek Gašparík. 2020. "Health and Structural Integrity of Monitoring Systems: The Case Study of Pressurized Pipelines" Applied Sciences 10, no. 17: 6023. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10176023
APA StyleChmelko, V., Garan, M., Šulko, M., & Gašparík, M. (2020). Health and Structural Integrity of Monitoring Systems: The Case Study of Pressurized Pipelines. Applied Sciences, 10(17), 6023. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10176023