Improving the Bending Behaviour of Mechanically-Lined Rigid Pipe
20170341119 · 2017-11-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16L58/1081
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B21D39/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16L58/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B21C37/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16L58/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A method of making mechanically-lined pipe with primary expansion by plastically expanding a liner sleeve within an outer pipe, under lining pressure applied internally to the liner sleeve. On relieving the lining pressure, elastic radial contraction of the outer pipe makes a mechanical bond between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve. Then, secondary expansion of the outer pipe is performed under fixing pressure, which may be greater than the lining pressure, applied internally to the liner sleeve at an end portion of the pipe. This makes or strengthens a mechanical bond at the end portion. The resulting pipe joint has an end portion and a body portion inboard of the end portion. The body portion has a first, lesser bonding pressure between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve. The end portion has a second, greater bonding pressure between the outer pipe and liner sleeve.
Claims
1. A method of making mechanically-lined rigid pipe, comprising: in a primary radial expansion, expanding an outer pipe by plastically expanding a liner sleeve against an inner surface of the outer pipe, under lining pressure applied internally to the liner sleeve; relieving the lining pressure to permit elastic radial contraction of the outer pipe around the plastically-expanded liner sleeve, that contraction making a mechanical bond between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve; and subsequently, performing a secondary radial expansion of the outer pipe by local plastic expansion of the liner sleeve against the inner surface of the outer pipe, under fixing pressure applied internally to the liner sleeve, wherein the fixing pressure is greater than the lining pressure.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the outer pipe is at least partially expanded plastically during the secondary expansion.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the fixing pressure is applied internally to the liner sleeve at an end portion of the mechanically-lined pipe.
3. The method of claim 3, wherein the mechanical bond between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve is at a body portion of the mechanically-lined pipe inboard of the end portion at which secondary radial expansion is performed.
4. The method of claim 1, followed by applying an overlay at which the liner sleeve is chemically or metallurgically bonded to the outer pipe.
5. The method of claim 1, comprising placing an external die around the outer pipe before perform the secondary radial expansion
6. The method of claim 1, comprising inserting an expander apparatus into the end portion of the mechanically-lined pipe after relieving the lining pressure, and activating the expander apparatus after insertion to apply the fixing pressure to the liner sleeve.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the fixing pressure is applied to the liner sleeve over a length of less than 50 cm of the mechanically-lined pipe.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the secondary radial expansion is performed to make or to strengthen a mechanical bond between the liner sleeve and the outer pipe.
10. Mechanically-lined rigid pipe made by the method of claim 1.
11. A rigid pipe joint of mechanically-lined pipe comprising an outer pipe that surrounds a plastically-expanded liner sleeve and that is mechanically bonded to the liner sleeve by elastic radial contraction, the pipe joint comprising at least one end portion extending inwardly from an open end and a body portion inboard of the end portion, wherein: the body portion has a first, lesser bonding pressure between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve and the, or each, end portion has a second, greater bonding pressure between the outer pipe and the liner sleeve.
11. The pipe joint of claim 11, wherein the body portion comprises elastically-expanded outer pipe.
13. The pipe joint of claim 11, wherein the end portion comprises plastically-expanded outer pipe.
14. The pipe joint of claim 11, wherein the end portion comprises an overlay at which the liner sleeve is chemically or metallurgically bonded to the outer pipe.
5. The pipe joint of claim 11, wherein the end portion extends over a length of less than 50 cm of the mechanically-lined pipe.
16. The pipe joint of claim 11, wherein bonding gap between the liner sleeve and the outer pipe is no greater than 10 μm, at least at the or each end portion,
17. (canceled)
Description
[0065] In order that the invention may be more readily understood, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0066]
[0067]
[0068]
[0069]
[0070]
[0071]
[0072]
[0073] Reference has already been made to
[0074] Referring next, then, to
[0075] The expander apparatus 32 shown in
[0076] The expander apparatus 34 further comprises a cylindrical internal hydraulic expander tool 36 that fits closely inside the end portion of the pipe joint 10 in longitudinal alignment with the backing ring 34.
[0077] The end portion of the pipe joint 10 corresponds to the depth of the end-plug 18 in the open end of the lined pipe joint 10, where the now removed end-plug 18 shielded the liner sleeve 14 from pressurised water 20 during expansion of the liner sleeve 14 as shown in
[0078] Thus, the expander tool 36 shown in
[0079] When the expander tool 36 is activated, water 20 is introduced into the chamber 38 and is pressurised to a high fixing pressure, to the extent that the portion of the liner sleeve 14 aligned with the expander tool 36 expands plastically into tight mechanical engagement with the outer pipe 12. Consequently, the mechanical bond 26 between the liner sleeve 14 and the outer pipe 12 then extends to the end of the lined pipe joint 10 as shown in
[0080]
[0081] The wedge surfaces 50 interact such that when the cam member 48 is driven longitudinally into the end of the lined pipe joint 10 by a ram 52, the jaws 46 are forced radially outwardly as shown to apply radially-outward pressure to the inside of the liner sleeve 14. As with the chamber 38 of the hydraulic expander tool 36 of
[0082] As in the prior art shown in
[0083] Finally,
[0084] It will be noted from the dotted line in
[0085] Preferably, as shown by the solid line in
[0086] It will be recalled that the liner sleeve 14 expands beyond its elastic limit by virtue of the lower internal pressure applied along the major central body portion of the lined pipe joint 10. It therefore follows that the liner sleeve 14 will also be expanded beyond its elastic limit by the higher internal pressure applied along the minor end portion of the lined pipe joint 10. Thus, under the higher internal pressure applied at the end portion by the expander apparatus 32, the liner sleeve 14 will experience a greater extent of radial expansion relative to the body portion, as permitted by clearance of the outer pipe 12 within the surrounding backing ring 34.
[0087] Until clearance of the outer pipe 12 within the surrounding backing ring 34 is taken up, plastic radial expansion of the liner sleeve 14 is constrained by inward pressure from the outer pipe 12, whose radial expansion is driven by contact from the expanding liner sleeve 14. Initially, radial expansion of the outer pipe 12 at the end portion of the lined pipe joint 10 is in the elastic domain, which mirrors the transient radial expansion of the outer pipe 12 along the central body portion of the lined pipe joint 10 during mechanical lining procedures of the prior art. However in view of the increased internal pressure within the end portion of the lined pipe joint 10, the liner sleeve 14 when undergoing plastic expansion may also expand the outer pipe 12 to or just beyond its elastic limit at the end portion. This strengthens the mechanical bond between the outer pipe 12 and the liner sleeve 14 at the end portion, which is helpful to resist wrinkling of the liner sleeve 14 at the critical interface between the mechanical bond and an overlay that may subsequently be applied at the end of the lined pipe joint 10.