Lecture 4. Pipes Materials and Loads1 PDF
Lecture 4. Pipes Materials and Loads1 PDF
Lecture 4. Pipes Materials and Loads1 PDF
Loads on pipes
When pipes are buried, many forces affect them. The following are the main forces expected
to affect buried pipes:
A- Loads due to Back fill:
Back fill load on a pipe depends on:
Trench width
Depth of excavation
Unit weight of the fill material
Frictional characteristics of the backfill.
These factors are formulated in the following formula:
= 9 .8 C
* *B 2
d
d
where,
Wd = load on buried pipe as due to backfill (Newton per linear meter)
Cd = Coefficient based on the type of backfill and ratio of trench depth
to width.
Example (1)
Calculate the backfill load on a 610 mm pipe given the following information:
Backfill depth (H) = 3.6 m
Trench width at the top of the pipe is 1.2 m
Backfill is saturated clay, P = 1920 kg/m3
Solution
H/Bd = 3.6/1.2 = 3 from the figure Cd=2.2
Or you can calculate Cd from the equation
= 9 .8 C
* *B 2
d
d
= 9 . 8 x 2 . 2 * 1920 * (1 . 2 ) 2
= 6082 N/m
Example (2)
Calculate the wheel load on a 610 mm pipe that has a backfill cover of 0.8 m.
Solution
From the table the wheel load is 14.15 kN / m (by interpolation)
Since H = 0.80 m and in the range (0.61 m 0.90 m) use table to find the impact factor
of 1.1
Truck load = 14.15 X 1.1 = 15.57 KN/m.
W
For table 2, the minimum values are for
10
Note: [The truck load can be also estimated as a superficial load].
Trench
Structure
Trench
Structure
L
W
Example (3)
A concrete structure 0.91 m wide with a weight of 1340 kg/m crosses a trench
1.22 m wide in damp clay. The structure bears on the soil 1.83 m above the top
of the pipe. Find the load transmitted to the pipe.
Solution
The load applied by the structure is 1340X1.22= 1635 kg
The pressure applied to the soil above the pipe is
P= 1635/0.91= 1795 kg/m
The ratio of depth to the width is 1.83/1.22= 1.5 From table 2, the maximum
proportion of the load reaching the pipe will be 0.51.
Therefore the load reaching the pipe will be
Trench
P = 1795X0.51=915 kg/m
Structure
L= 0.91 m
W=1.22 m
Strength of pipes:
The crushing strength of sewer pipes is determined by the three-edge bearing test. The pipe
is stressed until failure occurs. Table (3) gives the minimum crushing strength for clay
pipes.
Strength requirements for reinforced concrete pipes are given in table 4, for this table the
crushing force correspond to 0.25mm crack. The values in the table are pre mm diameter,
thats why they are called D-Loads (KN/m.mm)
The pipe strength in supporting loads depends on the method of pipe bedding :
- Class (D) bedding support the three bearing load only.
- Class(C) support (1.5) the three edge load (1.5 = Load factor)
- Class (B) bedding has a load factor of 1.9.
- Class (A) bedding has a load factor of 2.3 to 3.4.
- Other pipe material has similar tables to estimate their strength
Example (4)
A 610 mm concrete pipe is subjected to a load of 40 KN/m (backfill and wheel load). The
D-load of the pipe to produce 0.25 mm crack is 38.3N/m.mm (The three edge test
strength). The pipe bedding is Class A with a load factor of 3.4.
a) What is the strength of this pipe
b) Is the strength enough to resist the applied load if the minimum factor of safety is 1.5
c) What is the final factor of safety in this case
Solution
a) Strength of the pipe= the three edge test strength X bedding load factor =
(38.3X610)X3.4= 79434.2 N/m = 79.4 KN/m
b) Factored applied stress = applied stress X load factor = 40X 1.5= 60 KN/m.
c) Since the strength is 79.4 KN/m > factored applied stress (60 KN/m), so the strength
is enough.
Factor of safety = pipe strength/ applied stress= the three edge test strength X bedding
load factor/ applied stress.