Chapter 1 - Section 3 When To Use Nozzlepro
Chapter 1 - Section 3 When To Use Nozzlepro
Chapter 1 - Section 3 When To Use Nozzlepro
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1.3.1
NozzlePRO 5.2
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Process Feed Line: A process feed line to a vessel cycles about every 6 hours. In 20 years this is 29,200 cycles. The number of design cycles is greater than 7000, so the safety factor against failure is as low as it can get, (about 2.0 ref: Nureg/CR-3243 ORNL/Sub/82-22252/1). The engineer decided that a good stress calculation was important since the number of cycles was high. The d/D ratio was only 0.27, but the geometry was pad reinforced. WRC calculations were not intended for pad reinforced geometries, and this is reflected in the results when the FEA calculation is compared against WRC 107.
WRC 107 Stress at Junction: WRC 107 Stress at Pad Edge: FEA Maximum Stress 25,246 psi. 20,569 psi. 68,172 psi. 2.7 times higher than WRC 107
Gas Riser: The 400F 18 riser was only subject to 10 psig of internal pressure. Thermal moments produced less
than 10,000 psi of stress in the pipe except at an 8 takeoff that was valved and capped. The stress at this unloaded branch connection showed to be in excess of 55,000 psi. A finite element calculation of loads through the header showed that the actual stress was less than 9,000 psi. The line was not even close to being overstressed, there was no reason for redesign or rerouting of the pipe. B31 Piping Code Peak Stress: Actual Peak Stress > 55,000 psi. < 10,000 psi. Actual stress is 1/ 5th B31 Value
Nozzle Loads: Using rigid anchor assumptions, the conservatively estimated loads on the vessel nozzle were in excess of 344,844 ft. lb. When flexibilities were inserted at the nozzle, the moments due to the piping loads
dropped to 53,981 ft.lb., a
Stress Intensification Factors (SIFs): The piping attached to the top of the vacuum tower showed a
stress intensification at the attachment to the top of the vessel of 1.0 in the pipe stress program. The calculated stress was one third of the allowable due to moment caused by a large overhanging valve. The client wanted to know if a SIF of 1.0 was reasonable for a top head pipe connection. NozzlePRO calculates SIFs automatically, and for the top head nozzle geometry the inplane and outplane SIF was 7.7 which put the stress well over the allowable. A thicker nozzle (the quick fix) would reduce the stresses in the nozzle, but create higher stresses in the head. The loads needed to be reduced.
Allowable Loads and Pressure MAWP: The process engineer wanted to slope the process vent lines into the header to improve flow and reduce the potential backpressure buildup in the header. He didnt want to create a much weaker junction, however by using a connection at 45 degrees. He wanted to know which of the connections was stronger for bending moments the straight 90 degree intersection, the 45 lateral, or the hillside connection. The vent header was 24 x 0.375 wall, and the vent outlet was 16 x 0.375 wall. The results from NozzlePRO are shown below and confirm what is generally known about these intersections. The larger footprint
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1.4.1
NozzlePRO 5.2
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of the lateral improves the moment carrying capacity, but cuts a larger hole in the header in the longitudinal direction increasing the hoop stress effect. The hillside in this d/D ratio performs essentially as well as the straight through intersection.
Straight Through InPlane Max Allowed Moment Outplane Max Allowed Moment Maximum Allowed Pressure Lateral (45) Hillside B31 Code
451,108 in.lb. 407,465 in.lb. 191,997 in.lb. 316,998 in.lb. 326 psi n/a
Good Comparisons with WRC 107: The engineers were concerned that some of the results from the FEA calculation were different from WRC 107 programs. When calculations are run that keep the limits of the WRC 107 approach in mind, the comparisons are much better. Leaving out pressure effects, (which are not included in WRC 107), using a small d/D, only a single moment loading, and a t/T ratio greater than 1.0, the comparisons between FEA and WRC 107 are much better:
Stress (psi) WRC 107 FEA tn=0.5 FEA tn=0.9 FEA tn=1.5
Rectangular Attachments (WRC 107): As might be expected, WRC 107 for a rectangular attachment that has essentially the same dimensions in the longitudinal direction as the 8 pipe above produces essentially the same stress. The FEA model shows higher stresses around the corners of the geometry where the stress is concentrated. The FEA model also shows the beneficial effect of pads and the gross errors that can occur when WRC 107 is used for pad type attachment geometries.
WRC 1071 6x8 Rectangle No Pad 6x8 Rectangle 1 Wide Pad 6x8 Rectangle 4 Wide Pad 6x8 Rectangle 6 Wide Pad 6x8 TriPlate Supt. 6 Wide Pad 6x8 Inverted Tee 6 Wide Pad
1 2
WRC 1072
FEA
WRC Pad simulation method by increasing bearing area WRC Pad simulation method by increasing vessel wall thickness
Triple-Plate (56,826)
1.4.2