SPE-188246-MS Final 2017.09.18
SPE-188246-MS Final 2017.09.18
SPE-188246-MS Final 2017.09.18
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This paper was prepared for presentation at the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition & Conference held in Abu Dhabi, UAE, 13-16 November 2017.
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Abstract
DNV GL has recently carried out a JIP to propose rational design criteria for clad and lined pipes.
Attention has been paid to pressure containment, local buckling/wrinkle, fracture and fatigue limit states.
In the DNV GL JIP design guideline, a strain criterion for the liner wrinkle limit state is proposed. The
criterion is based on experimental test results and does not include any safety factor. Advanced FE
Model, purposely calibrated through dedicated experimental tests, can be developed to quantify the
strength and deformation capacity of lined pipes considering installation and operational loads, pipeline
geometry and fabrication technology and tolerances.
The FEM analyses reproduced effectively the behaviour of clad/lined pipelines subject to combined
loads. The presence of liner contributes to overall pipeline strength and deformation capacity, although it
introduces an issue due to the risk of wrinkling and detachment from the baking steel. For lined pipes
with no or low internal pressure, the liner will normally separate, i.e. wrinkle, from the backing steel
prior to reaching the local buckling capacity of the backing steel alone.
The advanced FEM analysis approach can be very helpful for lined pipe strength and deformation
capacity assessment, thus aiding engineers during the design process. The accurate reproduction of
failure modes under combined loads can drive engineers through a proper design of clad/lined pipe in
offshore extreme environment/loading conditions.
Introduction
Clad and lined pipeline materials have been used in the oil and gas industry for handling corrosive
media for more than 25 years, particularly when fluids from wells are very aggressive. This choice is
ultimately a need either when the traditional carbon steel is unable to meet the cracking resistance
requirements that severe sour service requires, or when the anticipated corrosion rates impose the
adoption of excessive corrosion allowance and/or additional mitigation measures (inhibitors, pig runs
etc.) that impact operational costs unacceptably.
2 SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS
In some circumstances, particularly in deep waters, meeting the challenges of minimum leak risk due to
corrosion in sensitive areas and/or of interruption of production requires the adoption of corrosion
resistant alloys. A “clad pipe” is a double-wall pipe consisting of a load-bearing high-strength, low-alloy
carbon steel outer pipe, lined with a thin-walled sleeve made from a corrosion-resistant material. It is an
alternative solution, less expensive than a full corrosion resistant pipe wall with which to tackle the issue
of structural integrity of oil and gas steel pipelines transporting aggressive fluids. Clad pipes make the
best use of corrosion-resistant alloys together with low-alloy steels that require protection from oil or
gas pollutants (e.g. hydrogen sulphide, chlorides, and water) in order to meet the required pipelines
performances during the lifetime without the prohibitive cost of producing line pipes from a stainless
steel or a nickel alloy thick enough to withstand pressure and structural loads.
Pipe producers provide two types of clad pipes: metallurgically clad pipes and mechanically clad pipes,
also known as lined pipes. The most frequently selected cladding and liner materials have to date been
AISI 316L, Incoloy 825 or Inconel 625, with typical diameters for clad and lined pipes of 14 - 36” and 6
– 24”, respectively.
When producing metallurgically clad pipes, the bonding process for joining the corrosion-resistant
internal sleeve to the strong external low-alloy carbon steel can be performed in several different ways:
by weld cladding, centrifugal casting, extrusion, or rolling laminated plates. During this metallurgical
process, however, only one single heat treatment is used for both the ferritic external layer and the
austenitic internal layer, but in some cases material combinations may not be technically feasible. In any
case, regardless of the manufacturing process, what defines the metallurgically clad pipes is the union of
the two materials into a single mass.
On the other hand, mechanically clad pipes are composed of a corrosion-resistant liner inserted into a
low-alloy external carbon steel pipe. The nature of the mechanical bond depends on the manufacturing
process, meaning that whichever method is chosen to combine the two pieces, the bond is purely
mechanical; therefore, the materials of the outer pipe and the liner pipe, unlike those of the
metallurgically clad pipes, remain two different masses, not fusing together to become a single body.
The mechanically clad pipe, in particular, seems to have a promising future, being less expensive.
Previous studies made on single-wall pipes have clearly shown that taking into account the installation
process of offshore pipelines is of great importance when designing these pipes. During this stage, the
pipeline is subjected to a combination of bending deformation and external pressure. Under both these
loading conditions, significant stress levels are developed in the pipeline wall. These stresses are
commonly associated with excessive cross-sectional ovalisation and possible local buckling, which may
result in pipeline collapse, particularly if “buckle propagation” is triggered. During the last twenty years,
a considerable amount of research has been dedicated to the subject, helping develop new design tools
incorporating them to gain a better understanding on how these pipeline materials perform under
different installation and service conditions, and hence enabling the pipeline and materials engineers to
make more appropriate decisions with regard to how these materials may be utilised in order to optimise
future pipeline projects.
In particular, in the case of installing underwater clad pipes, those tools could also be used to ensure the
structural stability of the load-bearing thick-walled outer pipe. Under the combined action of bending
and pressure, the thin-walled liner pipe exhibits significant deformation, which may cause wrinkling of
its wall, while the outer pipe is structurally stable. A wrinkled liner may not be acceptable, because it
does not allow proper pipeline pigging. It is an obstacle to hydrocarbon flow and is associated with
unacceptable stress raisers at the buckled area, which would lead to fatigue cracks under repeated
loading during operational conditions.
The objective of this paper is to (1) discuss the main technical issues related to lined pipes; (2) present
the developed FE Model aiming to quantify the strength and deformation capacity of lined pipes; and (3)
show the results of the FEM parametric study performed to quantify their effect on the strength and
deformation capacity of the lined pipe.
SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS 3
greater than the bending moment for which, at the sector in compression, the stress is equal to the
critical stress for axial compression case. In other words, wrinkling starts to develop at amoment that is
lower than Brazier’s. Again, this applies for a thin shell that is free to deform or that is not constrained
by a rigid casing as in the case of the liner. Except from external pressure or collapse limit state, there
are no close formats to describe the effect of containment on wrinkling. It is noteworthy the literature
dedicated to buckling of thin shells, which reports as guideline the dominance of D/t aramenter as far as
the development if local buckling is concerned: D/t between 45 and 60 and D/t between 90 and 120 are
boundaries that delimit the development of deformation mode at instability.
However, in the case of thin cylinders, in addition to D/t the most relevant parameter is the imperfection
of the liner or the deviation from the perfect circularity along the pipe joint. Imperfections can be caused
by local dents, misalignments due to initial ovality or high low of pipe joints, initial mismatching from
regular contact, etc. It is quite difficult to have indications as to how much the imperfections may impact
the axial and bending deformability of the liner without developing wrinkles. The current approach is
parallelling experimental tests with FE modelling, in order to obtain a calibration. This can be a starting
point for a comprehensive set of FE runs, the objective of which is twofold: to provide a basis for
defining a good approximation of the deformation capacity; to identify on which parameters the
outcome depends, with the aim to go in depth likely addressing specific tests.
thickness tolerance. The modified DNV OS-F101 DCC criterion are given in Figure 1 for gap height of
1mm and 0.1mm, respectively.
FAILURE MODES
BURSTING PRESSURE
LOCAL BUCKLING
COMBINED LOAD (BM, Pi, N)
AXIAL LOAD
STEEL
CLAD
STEEL
FEM analyses results evidences the significant improvement of the overall pipeline bending capacity
given by the contribution of the internal cladding (Figure 4). The maximum bending moment capacity of
clad pipe (Pipe #3) is about 38% higher than the pipeline without clad (Pipe #1).
Results are collected in Table 1 and compared with analytical prediction as per DNV OS-F101 and
Guidelines. FEM analyses performed considering clad contribution confirmed the pipeline strength
predicted, using DNV OS-F101 LCC design equation modified as per JIP guideline (DNV, 2013a). The
bending moment associated to ISO criteria (90% SMYS) calculated considering the clad layer, is much
lower (about 35%) than the allowable bending moment as per DNV LCC JIP equations. Imposed stress
based design (ISO) neglecting clad contribution would result in very small vertical OOS, not realistic
from an engineering and trenching technology point of view. The contribution of clad layer to overall
pipeline strength performance is necessary to establish an allowable imperfection height in line with
actual trenching equipment capabilities.
8 SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS
2925kNm – DNV
limit
15.9mm STEEL + 3mm
CLAD
2107kNm – DNV
allowable
15.9mm STEEL + 3mm
CLAD
Axial
Pressure Local Buckling
Compression
Containment Bending Moment
Capacity
[MPa] [kNm]
[kN]
Steel WT [mm] 15.9 18.9 15.9 15.9 18.9 15.9 15.9 18.9 15.9
FEM 23.1 27.7 30.1 3445 4358 4778 14675 18632 21173
DNV (No Safety Factor) 21.5 25.7 25.6 2047 2783 2925 15634 18919 20454
Table 1 – Pipeline Capacity – Comparison between FEM and DNV (No Safety Factor assumed).
As discussed in previous paragraphs, the presence of initial imperfection and defect can trigger the
formation of wrinkles on the internal liner, in particular in the presence of quick pressure drops during
shut-in/shut-off sequences and applied bending moment. These imperfections can be imputed to:
Local dents;
Misalignment due to ovality of pipe joints;
Hi-Lo due to wrong axial alignment of pipe joints during installation;
Initial mismatching/unbonding in liner/pipe contact.
This situation is highly detrimental during installation (local buckling occurring in sagbend) and
operation (snake-lay and interaction with uneven seabed, thermal load, longitudinal compressive strain);
the liner can develop wrinkles in proximity of triggering imperfection, with a consequent loss of
functionality of the whole PIP system, limiting the maximum strain allowable in the pipeline design
(Figure 6).
An FE investigation approach has been performed in order to understand how the initial imperfection
can reduce the strain capacity of a PIP system, both in installation and operation.
10 SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS
Detachment of
Liner from Pipe
Wrinkles
Figure 6 – Buckled Lined Pipe after Bending Test (Focke, 2007) and Wrinkling Pattern of a TFP (Hilberink et al., 2010).
In the FE model study attention has been paid to the overlay zone at pipe joint extremities, in which the
liner is mechanically bonded (welded) to the baking steel: in operation, the overlay zones fall in a
critical area, characterised by the presence of the girth weld. In this study, in proximity to the girth weld,
the following three scenarios have been assumed:
Free-to-slip (no weld): in this scenario (unlikely) the liner is unbonded due to a failure of the
overlay welding zone;
Seal Weld: in this scenario the liner is partially unbonded due to a failure of the overlay zone, at
any rate the liner is still bonded to the baking steel in proximity to the circumferential girth weld;
Overlaid Weld (120 mm longitudinal extension): this is the normal expected scenario in which
the overlay zone integrity is guaranteed.
The triggering imperfection has been introduced in the model simulating a misalignment of pipe joints
in correspondence of the field joint. This misalignment represents a real scenario that can happen in
particular due to:
Different ovalisation of pipe joints.
Improper axial alignment of joints (Hi/Lo).
In this study the effect of initial imperfection has been investigated considering two different scenarios
(Figure 8):
Perfect pipe (no initial radial imperfection);
Defected pipe (with an initial radial imperfection).
The FE model used in the analyses is shown in Figure 7. To simplify, only the 18in Outer Pipe and 16in
Inner Pipe have been modelled. The presence of the field joint sleeve has been neglected. Details of the
field joint zone are given in Figure 8.
The pipeline is subjected to the bending moment only; for the sake of simplicity, the internal
overpressure and axial loads are not considered. The bending moment is applied by imposing rotation at
pipeline extremities: the pipe is bent up to pipeline global failure (Figure 9).
Additional FEM have been performed taking into account the internal pressure (for seal weld
configuration only).
The entire set of performed analyses and correspondent results is listed in Table 2.
SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS 11
Liner
Misalignment
STEP 3
Bending
The initial imperfection has a great influence on PIP system behaviour, acting as a trigger of wrinkling
phenomena under external loads. The internal pressure has significant positive effects reducing wrinkle
occurrence (Figure 13): either accidental or programmed shut down can seriously menace the liner
integrity, especially in proximity to high curvature zone of pipelines (as in snake-lay).
The seam weld presence and extension has an influence too: free-to-slip, seal and overlay welded liner
show quite different wrinkling evolution (Figure 11). In the free-to-slip configuration, a single wrinkle is
triggered in proximity to the most curved section; then an additional secondary wrinkle rises up. For seal
weld and overlay configuration two wrinkles develop at two sides of the bonding zone, in proximity to
the section characterised by the highest curvature values.
This results are conservative: it should be considered that in the operation scenario the local curvature at
girth weld is reduced by the presence of field joint sleeve, that reduces the level of curvature at girth
12 SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS
weld.
BENDING LINER
PIPE PRESSURE LINER MOMENT DETACHMENT
@ FAILURE @ FAILURE
- - MPa - kNm mm
Failure
1mm
Perfect Pipe
Perfect Pipe Perfect Pipe No Pressure
No Pressure No Pressure Overlay Weld
Free to Slip Seal Weld
1 mm
… mm
Conclusion
Clad and lined pipes are used when fluids from wells are very aggressive. The choice between CS for
sour service and clad or lined pipes is linked to the anticipated severity of corrosion attack from
transported products: CS for mild sour service or low corrosion rate; CRA clad or lined pipes in case of
severe sour service or high corrosion rates. Nevertheless, the choice significantly impacts both
investment (cladded or lined pipes are quite expensive) and operational (corrosion mitigation by
inhibitors, pigging etc..) costs. Cladding or lining with corrosion resistant alloy are commonly selected
and designed for a safe life of field, i.e. without any need for additional devices designed to allow for
specific intervention works on the operating lines. The choice between cladding or lining with corrosion
resistant alloys depends on pipe diameter, in relation to the fabrication capability. Nevertheless, the
reliability of clad and lined pipes in operation depends on careful fabrication and installation processes,
which guarantee the performance parameters used in installation and operation design. For both clad and
lined pipes, an outstanding issue that stays behind the design as well as qualification tests and
installation engineering is the engineering criticality assessment, which is performed to determine defect
acceptance criteria for the girth welds carried out on board. Whether to repair or cut or accept, this
considerably impacts the installation schedule (Bruschi et al., 2017).
For the lined pipes, a remaining issue regards the criteria that drive the design for installation and
operation. In particular, the definition of the allowance for the deformation of lined pipes is crucial. In
fact, the imperfections that fabrication may randomly distribute on the lined pipes significantly affect the
strength capacity, in particular in applications where a minimum deformation capacity is required. This
is the inherent nature of the lined pipe: bi-metallic. Actually, the statistical distribution of the residual
imperfections after the most restrictive quality assurance and controls is not precisely known.
Furthermore, dedicated experimental surveys are not many and, often, the outcomes of those performed
are restricted as project specific. The rationalisation of design criteria, despite current efforts to propose
dedicated guidelines, needs additional data. In this context, the use of FEM as a numerical lab, coupled
with few experimental data made available by their owners, can be promising. FEM can refer to the
relevant model parameters and final behaviour taken from available experimental surveys, which allow
for model calibration.This is an approach that is currently pursued by clad and line pipe suppliers, field
operators, advanced engineering groups and certification bodies. Sharing the outcome, these efforts can
significantly improve the engineering guidelines currently in force.
Nomenclature
AUT Automatic Ultrasonic Testing
CRA Corrosion Resistant Alloy
CS Carbon Steel
DCC Displacement Controlled Condition
FEM Finite Element Model
JIP Joint Industry Project
LCC Load Controlled Condition
OOS Out of Straightness
PIP Pipe in Pipe
SMTS Specified Minimum Tensile Strength
SMYS Specified Minimum Yield Strength
TFP Tight-Fit Pipelines
SPE-SPE-188246-MS-MS 15
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