Modelling spatial variability in as-laid embedment for high pressure and high temperature (HPHT) pipeline design1
Modelling spatial variability in as-laid embedment for high pressure and high temperature (HPHT) pipeline design1
Subsea pipelines are being designed to accommodate higher temperatures and pressures. Current modelling approaches that adopt constant lateral seabed resistance along the pipeline do not capture the high spatial variability in as-laid pipeline embedment from field observations, which strongly affects the lateral resistance. Ignoring spatial variability when designing pipelines with engineered buckles leads to higher predictions of axial force along the pipeline, with reduced likelihood of buckle formation. This can result in excessive mitigation measures being adopted, such as sleepers or counteract structures, which significantly increase project costs. Spatial variability of pipeline embedment is not currently handled rationally in design because an understanding of the physical mechanisms that cause as-laid embedment and methods for accurately predicting it have only recently emerged. This paper illustrates how the influence of these physical mechanisms that drive embedment can be extracted from field survey data and then modelled synthetically in design analyses. The impact of embedment variability and the resulting variation in lateral seabed resistance on the lateral buckling response is illustrated. The framework represents an improvement in the way geotechnical uncertainty and variability is handled in pipeline-seabed interaction analyses for use in pipeline design, and has already begun to be implemented in practice.
High pressure and high temperature (HPHT), Lateral buckling, Modelling, Pipeline design, Pipeline embedment, Spatial variability
1853-1865
Westgate, Z.J.
983a044b-1644-4a5c-895d-6b7c83501ab9
Haneberg, W.
0fc0fc36-a11d-4af2-918f-31168a2ff8ce
White, D.J.
a986033d-d26d-4419-a3f3-20dc54efce93
22 August 2016
Westgate, Z.J.
983a044b-1644-4a5c-895d-6b7c83501ab9
Haneberg, W.
0fc0fc36-a11d-4af2-918f-31168a2ff8ce
White, D.J.
a986033d-d26d-4419-a3f3-20dc54efce93
Westgate, Z.J., Haneberg, W. and White, D.J.
(2016)
Modelling spatial variability in as-laid embedment for high pressure and high temperature (HPHT) pipeline design1.
Canadian Geotechnical Journal, 53 (11), .
(doi:10.1139/cgj-2016-0091).
Abstract
Subsea pipelines are being designed to accommodate higher temperatures and pressures. Current modelling approaches that adopt constant lateral seabed resistance along the pipeline do not capture the high spatial variability in as-laid pipeline embedment from field observations, which strongly affects the lateral resistance. Ignoring spatial variability when designing pipelines with engineered buckles leads to higher predictions of axial force along the pipeline, with reduced likelihood of buckle formation. This can result in excessive mitigation measures being adopted, such as sleepers or counteract structures, which significantly increase project costs. Spatial variability of pipeline embedment is not currently handled rationally in design because an understanding of the physical mechanisms that cause as-laid embedment and methods for accurately predicting it have only recently emerged. This paper illustrates how the influence of these physical mechanisms that drive embedment can be extracted from field survey data and then modelled synthetically in design analyses. The impact of embedment variability and the resulting variation in lateral seabed resistance on the lateral buckling response is illustrated. The framework represents an improvement in the way geotechnical uncertainty and variability is handled in pipeline-seabed interaction analyses for use in pipeline design, and has already begun to be implemented in practice.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 April 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 April 2016
Published date: 22 August 2016
Keywords:
High pressure and high temperature (HPHT), Lateral buckling, Modelling, Pipeline design, Pipeline embedment, Spatial variability
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 419535
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419535
ISSN: 0008-3674
PURE UUID: 5834f6ab-9712-4bd4-b301-ad217331c961
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Date deposited: 13 Apr 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:32
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Author:
Z.J. Westgate
Author:
W. Haneberg
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