Load Transfer Behavior During Cascading Pillar Failure: An Experimental Study

Author(s):  
Hangyu Dong ◽  
Wancheng Zhu ◽  
Chen Hou ◽  
Xige Liu
Author(s):  
Yingchun Chen ◽  
Shimin Zhang ◽  
Wenming Wang ◽  
Minghao Xiong ◽  
Hang Zhang

Coiled tubing can be used for steel catenary riser pigging operations to remove wax and other debris attached on the interior of steel catenary riser to recover production and ensure safety. Due to its low rigidity, coiled tubing would deform which might finally damage coiled tubing and steel catenary riser. Thus, in order to ensure safety and reliability of the operation, this article proceeded experimental study on the axial load transfer behavior of a coiled tubing stuck in a steel catenary riser when the coiled tubing has not yet helical buckled. According to the experimental results, the inner pipe’s axial force transfer efficiency is always less than 1; the outer pipe of “unfixed steel catenary riser boundary” would elongate forced by the inner pipe within it, which makes the injected displacement of inner pipe within outer pipe of “unfixed steel catenary riser boundary” bigger than the injected displacement of inner pipe within outer pipe of “fixed steel catenary riser boundary” system at the same force-out; before the inner pipe helical buckles, inner pipe’s force transfer efficiency for unfixed and fixed system can be considered as the same. The research done above might provide important theoretical supports for the steel catenary riser pigging operation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 594-597 ◽  
pp. 527-531
Author(s):  
Wan Qing Zhou ◽  
Shun Pei Ouyang

Based on the experimental study of rotary filling piles with large diameter subjected to axial load in deep soft soil, the bearing capacity behavior and load transfer mechanism were discussed. Results show that in deep soft soil foundation, the super–long piles behave as end-bearing frictional piles. The exertion of the shaft resistance is not synchronized. The upper layer of soil is exerted prior to the lower part of soil. Meanwhile, the exertion of shaft resistance is prior to the tip resistance. For the different soil and the different depth of the same layer of soil, shaft resistance is different.


1989 ◽  
Vol 115 (6) ◽  
pp. 755-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Radhakrishnan ◽  
Chun F. Leung

Author(s):  
Jose A. Romero ◽  
Alejandro Lozano

The paper deals with the pavement damage potential of long combination vehicles equipped with tandem C-dolly. Due to its double-hitch bar design, the tandem C-dolly enhances the lateral stability of the articulated vehicles; however, its single articulation could create significant levels of longitudinal load transfer between the coupled bodies and posing higher pavement damage. The pavement damage potentials of vehicles equipped with tandem C-dolly is compared with that of vehicles equipped with standard tandem A-dolly. For pavements with a roughness lower than 2 mm/m the effect of tandem design is only marginal. For pavements with roughness greater than 2 mm/m, results suggest an optimum speed (95 km/h) at which C-dolly is 1% less damaging than A-dolly. However, for the other two speeds evaluated (75 and 115 km/h), C-dolly is up to 12.1% less friendly than A-dolly. Such increases in road damaging potential are significant and an experimental study should be performed to validate results.


2002 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 100-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. O. Stalnaker ◽  
J. L. Turner

Abstract An empirical methodology is described for separately characterizing vehicles and road courses for subsequent combination to predict tire force histories in tire use or testing. By building a library of vehicle and wear course characterizations, indoor wear test simulations can be selectively constructed by using any combination of “virtual” test vehicles and wear courses. A reliable transient record of vertical, lateral and fore-aft forces and inclination angles can be generated and supplied to drive the indoor wear tire loading fixture. Vehicle characterization involves mapping the basic dynamic load transfer behavior over a range of acceleration, deceleration and cornering maneuvers. A unique indoor vehicle test facility is described for efficiently capturing the tire forces and inclination angles during various maneuvers. All four tire positions can be characterized. Vehicle center of gravity (CG) accelerations and speeds are also recorded during indoor testing. An alternative to experimental measurements is the use of a vehicle computer model for mapping the basic dynamic load transfer behavior. Empirical equations relating vehicle kinematics to tire forces and inclination angles have been developed and are presented. A method of utilizing these equations together with outdoor wear course measurements for predicting transient tire force histories is presented. The method is demonstrated and validated with several vehicle case studies. The tire force component of a wear course can be characterized by measurement of a few parameters: the vehicle CG accelerations and the longitudinal velocity. Course characterization is illustrated using the Department of Transportation's Uniform Tire Quality Grading wear course in the San Angelo, TX area. The full 650 km course was characterized and combined with the laboratory characterization of a 1997 Pontiac Grand Am. Four 650 km drive files were created, one for each tire position, for an indoor wear machine. These consisted of five time-based parameters: radial load, lateral force, wheel torque (acceleration, deceleration forces), inclination angle, and velocity. By sequencing a tire through these four drive files, it was “rotated” as it would have been on the actual vehicle. Examples of tire wear rates and irregular wear are shown for a number of tire constructions, comparing the indoor to the outdoor results. Good correlation was achieved. This simulation technique permits the tire force spectrum of quite complex and lengthy routes to be accurately reproduced in the precisely controlled environment of the laboratory. Each cornering maneuver, each braking and acceleration event, every hill and town can be reproduced in real-time. Only by combining the specific vehicle dynamics of a given vehicle with that of a specific wear route can tire wear be accurately simulated. This tire-vehicle system simulation methodology is referred to as a TS-Sim model.


2000 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 132-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wataru Nakayama ◽  
Masud Behnia ◽  
Hiroaki Mishima

An experimental study of forced convection in impinging flow, using fluorocarbon FX3250 and a simulated electronic chip, was performed. A test section consisting of a 35 mm long, 1 mm wide slot nozzle in a 2 mm thick plate offset 2 mm from the heat source was used. The simulated chip array consisted of five foil strip (4 mm wide) heaters, positioned with the center strip directly beneath the slot nozzle. The velocity of the coolant was varied from 0.53 to 5 m/s, and the subcooling in the range from 2 to 21 K. The experiments were conducted focusing on two cases. First, only the center strip was heated. Second, all the heaters were energized, and the strip-by-strip variations of heat transfer were measured. The critical heat flux (CHF) on the center strip, determined by sensing the onset of oscillations and subsequent rapid rise of foil temperatures, was found considerably lower than those predicted by the existing correlations. It is pointed out that the thermal mass of the test heater could be an important factor for the CHF. The heat transfer behavior of other strips showed channel-flow or jet-impingement mode depending on the strip location and the coolant flow rate. [S1043-7398(00)00202-4]


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