减少管线行走的管道夹紧垫三种近海土壤的物理模拟试验

C. O’beirne, P. Watson, C. O’Loughlin, D. White, Alexander Hodson, S. Ang, S. Frankenmolen, Jesper Hoj-Hansen, M. Kuo, T. Roe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

管道夹紧垫(pcm)是一种相对较新的系统,可为管道提供锚固力,以减轻海上管线的“行走”。它们代表了锚桩、排土场和传统混凝土床垫的一种经济高效的替代方案。该系统包括一个铰接的混凝土结构,该结构夹紧在一段铺设的管道上,混凝土压载日志确保夹紧作用,其好处是PCM的100%水下重量有助于轴向摩擦。pcm已成功应用于一个深水项目,但性能数据显示,土壤类型的影响,并允许建立一个一般的设计框架,还没有可用。本文通过在三个操作人员的支持下,通过三个系列的离心机测试来研究PCMs的性能,从而解决了这一差距。每个系列包括对一种不同的重组深水土壤进行如下试验:(a)西非粘土;(b)墨西哥湾粘土;(c)碳酸盐粉砂。在每次测试中,在飞行中安装一个按比例缩放的管道,并进行轴向循环,以表示其先前的使用寿命。然后将按比例缩放的PCM模型和镇流器装置安装在飞行中的管道上,模拟PCM的使用,以减轻作业过程中的管道行走。安装pcm后,进行进一步的轴向循环,测量系统沉降、轴向阻力和超孔隙压力的变化。本文展示了PCMs在一系列土壤类型中的性能和适用性,突出了轴向阻力和沉降的变化。这套结果将有助于校准工业设计工具,消除不必要的保守性,并设计出优化的管道锚定解决方案。关键结果是管道-PCM组合体系和PCM沉降的等效摩擦系数,它们都表现出依赖于土壤类型的行为。在粘土中,由于“固结硬化”,摩擦随着时间的推移而显著增加。这证实了最近才在管道设计中认识到的重要影响。相比之下,粉砂的硬化行为并不明显,尽管研究表明,与沉降相关的阻力可能会增加,这似乎会在管道周围调动额外的(楔入)应力。在安装PCM后,由于增加了重量,管道嵌入得更深。在系统循环过程中,由于直接的土壤变形和与固结相关的压缩,会产生额外的沉降。粘土的埋置幅度较大,但在所有情况下都不会导致夹紧作用释放。总的来说,PCM系统在提供海床上单位重量的高水平锚固力方面的效率得到了证实。证明了PCM在50-100%沉水重量范围内的长期锚固力。这比通常使用的岩石护坡要有效好几倍。
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Pipe Clamping Mattresses to Mitigate Flowline Walking; Physical Modelling Trials on Three Offshore Soils
Pipe clamping mattresses (PCMs) are a relatively new system for providing anchoring force to pipelines, to mitigate offshore flowline ‘walking’. They represent a cost-effective and highly efficient alternative to anchor piles, rock dump and conventional concrete mattresses. The system comprises a hinged concrete structure that clamps onto a section of laid pipeline, with concrete ballast logs securing the clamping action – with the benefit that 100% of the submerged weight of the PCM contributes to axial friction. PCMs have been applied successfully to one deepwater project, but performance data showing the influence of soil type, and allowing a general design framework to be established, has not yet been available. This paper addresses this gap by investigating the performance of PCMs through three series of centrifuge tests, supported by three Operators. Each series comprises tests on a different reconstituted deepwater soil as follows: (a) West African clay; (b) Gulf of Mexico clay; and (c) carbonate silty sand. In each test, a scaled pipeline is installed in-flight and cycled axially to represent its prior operating life. Scaled PCM models and ballast units are then installed onto the pipe in-flight, mimicking the use of PCMs to mitigate pipeline walking during operation. After installation of the PCMs, further axial cycles are applied, with the system settlement and changes in axial resistance and excess pore pressure measured. The paper shows the performance and applicability of PCMs for a range of soil types, highlighting variations in axial resistance and settlement. The suite of results will help to calibrate design tools for industry, removing unnecessary conservatism and enabling an optimised pipeline anchoring solution to be designed. Key results are equivalent friction factors for the combined pipe-PCM system and PCM settlement, which both show behaviour dependent on soil type. In the clay soils, friction increases significantly over time due to ‘consolidation hardening’. This provides validation of an important effect that has only recently been recognised in pipeline design. In contrast, hardening behavior is not evident in silty sand – although the study suggests there is potential for increasing resistance associated with settlement, which appears to mobilize additional (wedging) stress around the pipeline. Upon PCM installation, the pipelines embed further due to the added weight. Additional settlement occurs during cycling of the system, due to immediate soil deformation and consolidation-related compression. The magnitude of embedment is greater for the clay soils, but in all cases does not cause the clamping action to release. Overall, the efficiency of the PCM system in providing a high level of anchoring force per unit weight placed on the seabed is confirmed. Long term anchoring forces in the range 50-100% of the submerged weight of the PCM are demonstrated. This is several times more efficient than the commonly used alternative of a rock berm.
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