pipeline explosion at henderson, nv pipe crushing & rupture

Post on 24-Feb-2016

97 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Pipeline Explosion at Henderson, NV Pipe Crushing & Rupture. Presented by: T. Kim Parnell, PhD , PE Parnell Engineering & Consulting (PEC) www.parnell-eng.com www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Pipeline Explosion at Henderson, NVPipe Crushing & Rupture

Presented by:T. Kim Parnell, PhD, PE

Parnell Engineering & Consulting (PEC)www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpeckim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org

Reference:“Analysis of the Dynamic Response of a Buried Pipeline due to a Surface Explosion,” Computational Aspects of Impact and Penetration, L. E. Schwer and R. F. Kulak, eds., Elme Press International, 1991 (with R. D. Caligiuri).

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

2

• Introduction• Overview of Incident• Natural Gas Pipeline Details• Finite Element Analysis of Pipe Crushing• Summary

Outline of Presentation

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

3

T. Kim Parnell, PhD,PE - Biography• T. Kim Parnell, Ph.D.,P.E. is Principal & Founder of Parnell Engineering & Consulting (PEC).

Kim holds Ph.D. and MSME degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University, a BES from Georgia Tech, and is a registered Professional Mechanical Engineer in the State of California. Kim is a Senior Member of IEEE, a Fellow of ASME, and SAE Member. Kim was 2011 Chair of the IEEE Santa Clara Valley Section (IEEE-SCV) with over 12,000 members and Past-Chair of the IEEE Consultants' Network of Silicon Valley (IEEE-CNSV).

• Dr. Parnell served on the Mechanical Engineering faculty at Santa Clara University teaching materials, design, and manufacturing applications. He currently participates as a Lecturer in the Stanford Composites Design Program. He works extensively in Composite material issues including Damage, Delamination, and Failure. Dr. Parnell is active in areas such as alternative energy, finite element analysis, robust design, and the use of computer simulation to achieve better designs in shorter time. He frequently works in medical devices and is an expert in the areas of failure analysis and accident investigation, and uses this expertise to help develop more reliable product designs. He has extensive experience in the analysis and simulation of structures, heat transfer, and fluid flow using finite elements and other numerical procedures..

• Dr. Parnell was recently at MSC.Software Corporation as Senior Manager in the Product Management group. He was the MSC Product Manager for Fatigue and Wind Energy. Before starting PEC, Kim was at Exponent Failure Analysis Associates (Senior Manager), Rubicor Medical (R&D Director), SST Systems, ATT Bell Laboratories, Stanford University and General Motors. He also was appointed as a Visiting Associate Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Stanford University, teaching graduate courses in Mechanics.

4

The PEPCON Incident• Fire and massive explosions at the

PEPCON plant in Henderson, NV on May 4, 1988.

• PEPCON produced Ammonium Perchlorate (AP) – an oxidizer

• Combination of events: Large quantity of AP on site due to

Challenger disaster 16” natural gas line running under the plant

(with leaking stitch welds)

5

PEPCON Explosions• Two large explosions equivalent to 200 Tons

and 500 Tons of TNT (3.0 and 3.5 on the Richter scale)

• Over $70M property damage; windows broken up to 30 miles away

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline Ruptured 40 foot section Crushed more than 260 feet Long-term leakage prior to blast from poor stitch

welds

6

Fire & Brimstone

• Rapid spread of fire; catastrophic explosion

• Most of event captured on video

7

Massive Explosion & Shockwave• Stills from video shot from Black Mountain – over 10

miles away

See link to separate video of blast

8

Aerial View - Before & AfterBefore After

9

16” Natural Gas Pipeline• Ran near the plant property boundary • Ruptured 40 foot section• Crushed more than 260 feet• Long-term leakage prior to blast from poor stitch welds

• Big Question: Did the pipe rupture occur before or after the explosions??

10

Pipeline Section Identification

11

Ruptured Gas Pipe – Initial View

12

Pipe After Some Digging

13

Pipe After Complete Excavation

14

Gas PipeRuptured & Crushed Sections

15

Pipe – Crushed Sections

16

Plant Buildings

17

Production Equipment

18

Transient Finite Element Analysis of Pipe Crush due to Blast

• To Address the Big Questions: Did the pipe rupture occur before or after the

explosions?? Was the natural gas pipeline leaking and

depressurized prior to the blast?

Pipe/Soil Model

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

19

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Sequence #1

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

20

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Sequence #2

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

21

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Sequence #3

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

22

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Sequence #4

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

23

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Sequence #5

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

24

Pipe Crushing Due to BlastResponse Comparison

Pressurized: Pi=300psi Unpressurized: Pi=0psi

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

25

Pepcon Site: Aerial View Pre-Incident

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

26

Pepcon Site: Aerial View Post-Incident

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

27

Pepcon Site after Incident

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

28

Pepcon Site after Incident

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

29

30

Pipeline-Unstable Crack Growth• 16-inch underground natural gas line• 300 psi internal pressure• Poor quality welds (ERW pipe)• Fast fracture of a 40-ft. section after initial weld

defects grew through fatigue to critical size• Resulting fire & explosions demolished the plant

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

Natural Gas Pipeline

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

31

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline• 40’ Ruptured Section• Electric Resistance Weld

(ERW) showed stitching and lack of fusion

Natural Gas Pipeline

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

32

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline• 40’ Ruptured Section• Electric Resistance Weld

(ERW) showed stitching and lack of fusion

Natural Gas Pipeline

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

33

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline• Crushed Section

Natural Gas Pipeline

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

34

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline• 260’ Crushed Section

Natural Gas Pipeline

kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org www.parnell-eng.com

www.linkedin.com/in/parnellpec

35

• 16” Natural Gas Pipeline• End 260’ Crushed

Section

top related