Pipeline Upheaval Buckling in Clayey Backfill and Shore Approach

Author(s):  
Alahyar Koochekali ◽  
Behrouz Gatmiri ◽  
Amirabbas Koochekali

True estimation of soil response during pipeline upheaval buckling is a key parameter in the safe design of subsea buried pipeline. In this paper the effects of sea mean water level over the buried pipeline and the effects of pipe burial depth on the soil response during vertical buckling are investigated. For that purpose a numerical modeling of pipeline upheaval buckling in clayey backfill has been conducted. Different sea mean water levels are considered to simulate the pipeline shore approach. In addition, various pipeline burial depths are considered to predict the soil uplift resistance and the soil failure mechanism. In order to model the large penetration of pipeline into the soft clay, Arbitrary Eulerian Lagrangian (ALE) method is employed. The results reveal that in the shallow water the sea mean water level may have considerable effects on the soil failure mechanism and soil uplift resistance. In addition, as the sea mean water level and pipe burial depth increases, a new transitional failure mechanism can be observed. The mechanism is a combination of vertical sliding block mechanism and the flow-around mechanism.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erwan Garel ◽  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Huayang Cai

Abstract. Observations indicate that the fortnightly fluctuations in mean water level increase in amplitude along the lower half of a tide-dominated estuary (The Guadiana estuary) with negligible river discharge but remain constant upstream. Analytical solutions reproducing the semi-diurnal wave propagation shows that this pattern results from reflection effects at the estuary head. The phase difference between velocity and elevation increases from the mouth to the head (where the wave has a standing nature) as the high and low water levels get progressively closer to slack water. Thus, the tidal (flood-ebb) asymmetry in discharge is reduced in the upstream direction. It becomes negligible along the upper estuary half, as the mean sea level remains constant despite increased friction due to wave shoaling. Observations of a flat mean water level along a significant portion of an upper estuary, easier to obtain than the phase difference, can therefore indicate significant reflection of the propagating semi-diurnal wave at the head. Details of the analytical model shows that changes in the mean depth or length of semi-arid estuaries, in particular for macrotidal locations, affect the fortnightly tide amplitude, and thus the upstream mass transport and inundation regime. This has significant potential impacts on the estuarine environment.


Author(s):  
M. Liu ◽  
C. Cross

Abstract Upheaval buckling (UHB) mitigation for trenched and buried pipelines can constitute a substantial cost element for offshore field development. There appears to have a variety of reasons for dual or more pipelines and umbilicals to be considered for installation inside the same trench. A single shared trench has been used for multiple pipelines not only for cost saving, but especially when constrained and driven by route corridor challenges. The common practice for dual pipeline trenching and UHB design is to either perform UHB design independently without due consideration of the pipelines in the proximity, potentially resulting in a compromised UHB mitigation design, or simply combine the uplift resistance required for each individual pipeline in the proximity to obtain the overall backfill/rock dumping to account for pipeline interactions. This paper re-examines the rationale of the normal practice and some fundamental aspects of UHB design for dual pipelines installation inside the same trench. The proximity effect on the uplift resistance is investigated with respect to pipeline spacing and burial depth. Its impact on the UHB mitigation is considered by a detailed analysis and a series of parametric simulations with respect to pipeline dimensions and gaps. The sensitivity of the soil slip failure angle and the dilatancy is also performed. Based on the theoretical analysis and FEA modelling, a model solution is formulated and proposed for evaluating uplift resistance reduction for multiple lines. The formulae are extended to deal with multi-layered soil and rockdump. A number of pipeline configurations have been discussed including a piggyback arrangement. A robust UHB mitigation and reduced optimum rockdumping can be achieved by considering the proximity effect through challenging the industry norms and common approach.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Binder ◽  
Christian Engelmann ◽  
Afshin Sadeghikhah ◽  
Mario Schirmer ◽  
Peter Krebs ◽  
...  

<p>At the current time, cities harbor more than 4 billion inhabitants. According to the United Nations’ projections, an increment by 2.5 billion is expected until mid-century. This will create enormous stresses to the water resource management in urban regions, including detrimental impacts on both groundwater quantity and quality. For instance, leakages from aging urban sewer network systems may lead to uncontrolled recharge and contamination. Sewer-borne contaminants cover a broad bandwidth of substances including pathogenic microbiota, nutrients and emerging contaminants. These substances may be highly persistent and accumulate in the subsurface over time. This, in turn, may pose a long-term threat to urban ecosystems. Hence, understanding the spatiotemporal distribution of sewer-borne plumes within the subsurface is of strategic importance. Sewer failures may include, among others, pipe blockades, local collapses and smaller cracks, as well as leaking joints between pipe segments. The intensity of sewer exfiltration to the soil and eventually to the aquifers depends on a variety of influencing factors, including pipe diameter and failure type as well as pipe burial depth and distance to the groundwater table. In this context, this study’s specific aim is to investigate the effect of selected vadose zone and aquifer properties and of failure characteristics on the final shape of sewer contaminant plumes to eventually delineate groundwater contamination characteristics solely from sewer network properties.</p><p>Results from two numerical studies, employing the HYDRUS 3D software code for variably saturated flow and transport simulation, will be presented. First, a small-scale principal model setup with a single pipe defect was designed to investigate the effect of soil type, colmation layer properties, pipe water level, defect shape and natural groundwater recharge on the shape of the plume in the vadose zone and at the aquifer table. Hereby, the simulations included both constant and varying pipe water levels. To define a de-facto worst-case scenario, continuous water injection as well as conservative transport (i.e., no decay or sorption) were assumed for most simulation runs. Besides the pipe water level, the intensity of precipitation was found to be a major influencing factor on the contaminant plume dimensions. In a second step, an intermediate-scale model involving a long pipe was conducted to further investigate overlay effects of multiple contaminant plumes. Here, multiple defects were positioned along the pipe in various distances, starting from a quasi-continuous line source and ending at a rather broad interval. It was found that the plume shapes on larger scale were very similar for most defect positionings, if the averaged injection rate remains the same. The direction of groundwater flow was altered in addition to the variation of the defects’ positions. Here, the contaminant plumes became slightly skewed.</p><p>The presentation will also give a short outlook to future works which will include simulations on city district scale employing HPC-capable codes such as ParSWMS, ParFlow and/or OpenGeoSys, and a comparison to simplified modeling approaches.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 8381-8417 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Cai ◽  
H. H. G. Savenije ◽  
C. Jiang ◽  
L. Zhao ◽  
Q. Yang

Abstract. Although modestly, the mean water level in estuaries rises in landward direction induced by a combination of the salinity gradient, the tidal asymmetry, and the backwater effect. The water level slope is increased by the fresh water discharge. However, the interactions between tide and river flow and their individual contributions to the rise of the mean water level along the estuary are not yet completely understood. In this study, we adopt an analytical approach to describe the tidal wave propagation under the influence of fresh water discharge, in which the friction term is approximated by a Chebyshev polynomials approach. The analytical model is used to quantify the contributions made by tide, river, and tide–river interaction to the water level slope along the estuary. Subsequently, the method is applied to the Yangtze estuary under a wide range of river discharge conditions and the influence of tidal amplitude and fresh water discharge on the longitudinal variation of mean water level is explored. The proposed method is particularly useful for accurately predicting water levels and the frequency of extreme high water, relevant for water management and flood control.


Ocean Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 1605-1621
Author(s):  
Erwan Garel ◽  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Huayang Cai

Abstract. Observations indicate that the fortnightly fluctuations in the mean amplitude of water level increase in the upstream direction along the lower half of a tide-dominated estuary (the Guadiana Estuary), with negligible river discharge, but remain constant upstream. Analytical solutions reproducing the semi-diurnal wave propagation shows that this pattern results from reflection effects at the estuary head. The phase difference between velocity and elevation increases from the mouth to the head (where the wave has a standing nature) as the timing of high and low water levels come progressively closer to slack water. Thus, the tidal (flood–ebb) asymmetry in discharge is reduced in the upstream direction. It becomes negligible along the upper estuary half as the mean sea level remains constant despite increased friction due to wave shoaling. Observations of a flat mean water level along a significant portion of an upper estuary suggest a standing wave character and, thus, indicate significant reflection of the propagating semi-diurnal wave at the head. Details of the analytical model show that changes in the mean depth or length of semi-arid estuaries, in particular for macrotidal locations, affect the fortnightly tide amplitude and, thus, the upstream mass transport and inundation regime. This has significant potential impacts on the estuarine environment in terms of ecosystem management.


Author(s):  
Prigiarto Hokkal Yonatan ◽  
Filip Van den Abeele ◽  
Jean-Christophe Ballard

Designing the cover height of buried pipelines to prevent them from buckling requires a method that can thoroughly and realistically model the phenomenon. This paper introduces a new technique to assess the risk of upheaval buckling (UHB) by using backfill soil springs (BFSS) to represent the uplift resistance provided by the backfill soil on top of a buried pipeline. This paper investigates the pre-buckling pipeline behavior related to UHB and highlights some of the key parameters governing the analysis. UHB assessment based on a case study was carried out and the results were then compared with those obtained from force-equilibrium methods generally used in the industry. The comparison shows that UHB assessment can be performed more rigorous using BFSS than using force-equilibrium methods. Therefore, using BFSS for UHB assessment improve the reliability in cover height design.


Author(s):  
Krum Videnov ◽  
Vanya Stoykova

Monitoring water levels of lakes, streams, rivers and other water basins is of essential importance and is a popular measurement for a number of different industries and organisations. Remote water level monitoring helps to provide an early warning feature by sending advance alerts when the water level is increased (reaches a certain threshold). The purpose of this report is to present an affordable solution for measuring water levels in water sources using IoT and LPWAN. The assembled system enables recording of water level fluctuations in real time and storing the collected data on a remote database through LoRaWAN for further processing and analysis.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-29
Author(s):  
Ahmad Jabber Hussain ◽  
Alaa Dawood Salman ◽  
. Nazar Hassan Mohammad

      According to this theoretical study which was about loading of piles under different condition of loading (compression and up-lift forces ) and for deferent pile installation (vertical and inclined pile ) by which it called (positive batter pile ) when the inclination of the load and pile is in the same direction and called (negative batter pile) when the inclination of load is opposite to the pile inclination, and from studying these cases the results of analysis can be summarize in the flowing points: 1-Variation of load inclination on piles effects on the bearing capacity and uplift resistance. It was found that bearing capacity of the piles increase with increasing of load inclination up to the inclination angle (37.5ͦ) which represents the maximum bearing capacity and then the bearing capacity decrease with increasing of load inclination. 2- Variation of batter pile affects the bearing capacity of the pile and up-lift resistance. by which equivalent angle will be used as result between the load and piles inclination and this angle will be used in calculation of piles resistance . 3- It was noticed the shape of soil failure is highly affected by the inclination of pile. The shape of failure for the soil which is in contact with pile and this include (vertical and batter piles) is highly affected by the angle of inclination.


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