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PSA-Week 2
PSA-Week 2
PSA-Week 2
Figure 1 Now further suppose that everything is in carbon steel and the vessel T-1 has its temperature raised to 350o F. When the valve A is opened, there will be an expansion between the centers of T-1 and T-2 which can be found in the usual manner, viz. Expansion rate for carbon steel at 350F= 2.26 ins/100 ft. (This value is taken from ANSI B31.3 Table 319.3.1A) Therefore Expansion = 50/100 x 2.26 = 1.13 inches. One of two things can now happen (1) As the pipe expands it will dent the sides of the vessels as shown in fig. 2.
Figure 3
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If the vessels are comparatively thin and the pipe of large diameter so that it can withstand a high load before buckling, then the first case applies and the vessel walls will bend inwards to accommodate the 1.13 inches expansion; if, on the other hand, the vessels are thick and the pipe of small diameter, the alternative condition shown in fig. 3 will occur. Now it is possible to calculate the stresses in the pipes and vessels for both of the systems illustrated, but even if they come within the range of allowable stresses neither case would be regarded as good engineering practice in the great majority of applications. However, if the plot had been laid out differently, it would have also been possible to run the pipe in two sections at right angles to each other, as shown in fig. 4.
Figure 4 With this configuration for the piping, as the point B moves out to B1 it is able to bend the leg BC into the position B1C, and the longer the leg BC, the easier it becomes to bend. It is a simple matter to calculate the minimum length l of BC which will allow the expansion to be absorbed whilst the stresses are restricted to a given value, and fig. 4 illustrates the simplest concept of all in the field of Flexibility Analysis, namely that of Minimum Leg Length. Article Excerpted From SST 101: Piping Stress Analysis Seminar Notes.
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