M. API 579 and Fracture Mechanics for Pipeline Engineers

COURSE SCHEDULE (both days)
7.30: Registration, breakfast, coffee
8.00 – 5.00: Course
It will be necessary to bring a laptop to this course.

Practical applications of fracture models and analysis methods – including PRCI MAT-8

Cracks and other planar anomalies, pose a significant risk to pipeline integrity. This course will arm attendees with both the knowledge and the tools necessary to apply the latest technology to this serious threat. The focus is on the practical application of modern fracture mechanics and flaw assessment methods and models to pipeline integrity. All attendees will receive a suite of Excel-based tools for burst-pressure prediction, rainflow cycle counting, and pressure cycle fatigue analysis. A workshop format will allow attendees to use this suite of tools on a series of practical problems – case studies will be presented and worked in order to apply the learnings and tools directly to attendees’ pipeline integrity programs.

A laptop is required for this course.

Documentation

  • PDF files containing all presentation slides.
  • Textbook (eBook version): Fracture Mechanics: Fundamentals and Applications, 4th Edition (2017), by T.L. Anderson.
  • An Excel-VBA application that performs burst pressure calculations, rainflow analysis, and pressure cycle fatigue analysis.

Who should attend

  • Pipeline engineers
  • Designers and service professionals who are involved with the maintenance, inspection, and repair of pipelines.

Continuing Education Units

Upon completion of the course, participants will be eligible to receive1.4 CEUs.

Instructor

Dr. Ted Anderson is an internationally recognized expert in fracture mechanics and fitness-for-service methods. He is the author of a best-selling book on fracture mechanics, which has been adopted as a required text in over 150 universities throughout the world. He is a founding member of the committee that writes and maintains the API 579 fitness-for-service Standard, and he is the developer of the PRCI MAT-8 pipeline fracture model. During his career, he has held positions at a number of organizations, including TWI, Texas A&M University, Quest Integrity, and Team Inc. He founded a consulting and software company in 1995, which was acquired by Quest Integrity in 2007. He holds a Ph.D. in metallurgy from the Colorado School of Mines.

Topics that will be covered include:

  1. Introduction and Overview
    • Cracks, notches and metal loss.
    • Common pipeline flaw types
    • ILI detection of crack-like anomalies
    • In-ditch inspection of crack-like anomalies
    • Driving force and resistance (toughness).
  2. Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics (LEFM)
    • Stress intensity factor (K)
    • Limitations of LEFM
  3. Elastic-Plastic Fracture Mechanics
    • Crack tip opening displacement (CTOD)
    • J-Integral
    • Fracture toughness testing.
    • Relationship between Charpy energy and fracture toughness.
  4. Pipeline Fracture Models
    • Log-Secant
    • CorLAS
    • API 579 failure assessment diagram (FAD)
    • PRCI MAT-8
    • Strengths and weaknesses of various models.
  5. Pressure Cycle Fatigue Analysis
    • The Paris equation.
    • Variable-amplitude loading
    • Rainflow cycle counting
    • Equivalent cycles and the Cyclic Index
  6. Special Topics
    • Probabilistic analysis.
    • Accounting for non-ideal crack profiles
  7. In-Class Exercises with Excel VBA Application
    • Burst pressure calculations
    • Rainflow analysis
    • Pressure cycle fatigue analysis