Spun Steel Pipes for the Offshore Industry

1983 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Royer ◽  
B. Dumas ◽  
M. Gantois

Many parts either for sea-line pipes as “buckle” or “crack arrestor,” or for structures may require the use of wall tubular products with high mechanical properties. Such heavy-wall pipes may be produced by centrifugal casting. Two Mn-Mo steels have been developed for medium-wall pipes (e≤35 mm) to be used under very severe climatic conditions: an acicular ferritic steel, a pearlite reduced steel produced by controlled rolling techniques [1, 2, 3]. More alloyed chemical composition and heat-treatments are needed to produce heavy-wall pipes. Then, production of such pipes is more difficult and sometimes impossible. Observations made on controlled-rolled Mn-Mo steel led to a better understanding of the influence of metallurgical structures and chemical composition on steel characteristics. Similar metallurgical structures can only be reached via other routes, for example centrifugal-casting of steel associated with heat-treatment, lead to the production of heavy-wall pipes with high strength and suitable transition temperature. After a brief description of the centrifugal casting technique, we introduce the grades developed for heavy-wall pipes with yield strength up to 100,000 psi. The mechanical properties, Battelle, fatigue, static bending, C.O.D., weldability, etc., of Centrishore II are given and compared to other materials. Possible offshore applications and other potential applications of parts produced by centrifugal casting are described.

2021 ◽  
Vol 1035 ◽  
pp. 424-429
Author(s):  
Fang Po Li ◽  
Ning Li ◽  
Xian Lin Wang ◽  
Ming Hua Liang

Drilling equipment is the key of oil and gas drilling development. Its manufacturing quality and service performance have important influence on oil and gas drilling development safety. The application of high strength grade steel plays an important role in improving drilling equipment manufacturing level and service performance. In this paper, the chemical composition, microstructure, tensile properties, impact properties and hardness of TMCP Q550D and Q-T Q550D high-strength low-alloy steel were tested and compared, and the application feasibility for drilling equipment manufacture was analyzed comprehensively. The experimental results show that the mechanical properties of Q550D by two different methods were obviously higher than the requirement of national standard. Q550D steel had excellent plasticity and toughness, which meets the requirement of drilling equipment manufacture. The main difference between different steel lied in their chemical composition and micro-structure. Carbon content of TMCP Q550D steel plate was lower than that of QT Q550D, and TMCP Q550 was mainly depend on TMCP technology and micro-alloy elements, whose micro-structure was mainly granular bainite. Q-T Q550D was mainly depend on Q-T technology, and its microstructure was tempered sorbite with obvious banded structure and slightly low toughness.


1984 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sidney Mindess

AbstractThe mechanical properties of cement-based materials must be controlled by the microstructure, pore geometry and chemical composition of the cement, by the properties of the aggregate, and by the nature of the cement-aggregate bond. While the precise form of the strength vs. microstructure relationship is as yet only imperfectly understood, enough is known to permit us to predict what alterations in the microstructure are required for the production of materials with very high strengths. There are also techniques available for reducing the brittleness that is often a characteristic of high-strength materials. The present paper presents an overview of the strength vs. microstructure relationships that can be used to predict the properties of high strength cement-based materials, and a brief review of some of the methods for achieving high strengths.


Author(s):  
M. Yu. Matrosov ◽  
P. G. Martynov ◽  
A. V. Mitrofanov ◽  
K. Yu. Barabash ◽  
T. V. Goroshko ◽  
...  

High-strength sheet product of low-alloyed steel, used at manufacturing of heavy-loaded structures, must have, apart from wear resistance, high toughness, good weldability, ability to hot and cold forming, machinability and low cost. Combination of these properties based on forming fine grain austenite structure before the martensitic transformation at definite its thermal treatment modes. Results of study of microstructure, fine structure and mechanical properties of high-strength boron-containing low-alloyed steel after different technological methods of the rolled product manufacturing presented: high-temperature hot rolling and twostages controlled rolling with accelerated cooling followed by thermal treatment – quenching with tempering. Variants of optimal modes of thermal treatment determined, providing combination of high level of impact toughness under negative temperatures, hardness and strength properties of sheet product. The two considered in the article technological variants, comprising treatment of low-alloyed steel with boron (hot rolling and two-stages controlled rolling with accelerated cooling) followed by thermal treatment results in forming fine structure of tempered martensite, which provides high mechanical properties, meeting the made requirements. Depending on the heating temperature before quenching in the range 770–950 °С, the morphology of the actual steel grain is changing from elongated to equiaxed, which is connected with the metal recrystallization process during heating after plastic deformation. The study results obtained allow to optimize the thermal treatment processes of sheet product of low-alloyed boron containing steel for particular conditions of application.


Author(s):  
A. G. Slutsky ◽  
I. L. Kulinich ◽  
V. A. Sheinert ◽  
V. A. Stefanovich ◽  
R. E. Trubitsky ◽  
...  

Various modifiers are used for non-furnace processing of cast iron. Some of them are designed for inoculating modification, which improves mechanical properties and eliminates the appearance of whiteness in castings, while others are designed for spheroidizing processing, in particular for producing cast iron with spherical and vermicular graphite. Some have both spheroidizing and inoculating properties. The main part of inoculating and spheroidizing modifiers is made on iron-silicon, Nickel and copper bases.In addition to the chemical composition, the size of the modifier particles, as well as their shape, are of great importance for modification. The optimal size of the fraction depends significantly on the non-furnace processing technology. Thus, for the larger the bucket and the longer the casting the longer the modification effect is required. One of the methods to achieve this is to increase the particle size of the modifier to 50 mm. When intraform processing of cast iron with spherical and vermicular graphite, magnesium-containing modifiers have strict limits on the upper size (4...5 mm), and in addition, the content of small fractions (less than 0.6...1 mm) is not allowed.The use of «heavy» magnesium-containing ligatures for spheroidizing modification of cast iron in order to obtain higher physical and mechanical properties has scientific and practical interest. Numerous studies show that for maximum effect the formation of the structure of the spheroidal graphite, dispersed pearlite metallic base of SGI (spheroidal graphite iron) relevant question is not only selection of the chemical composition of magnesium alloys, but also of the fractional composition, as well as effective method of input into the liquid melt.The purpose of this work was to study the technological features of obtaining cast iron with spherical graphite by bucket modification of copper-magnesium ligature.The researchers used a Leo–1420 scanning microscope, a Polam l-213 optical microscope, and a VEGA II LMU electron microscope with an INCA ENERGY 350 microanalyzer. High-speed induction melting plant, a set of equipment for analyzing the technological and mechanical properties of high-strength cast iron were used.Earlier experimental studies have shown the real possibility of obtaining in the laboratory a «heavy» copper-magnesium alloys as the alloying of magnesium metal with copper, followed by rapid cooling with use of rolling and plastic deformation of powder alloys. Analysis of test results of samples of such alloys showed that it depends on the value of its additives into liquid iron in the structure of formed graphite phase in compacted and globular form. At the same time, the metal base of cast iron is additionally alloyed with copper, which has a favorable effect on the strength characteristics of SGI.However, an urgent problem is the possibility of the appearance of a cementite phase in the structure of high-strength cast iron as a result of its increased supercooling due to the process of spheroidization of the graphite phase. This phenomenon is compounded by the fact that the copper-magnesium ligature, in contrast to the «light» ligature, does not contain silicon active graphitizer. This feature must be taken into account when obtaining high-strength cast iron of high grades.


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