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For the safe operation of gas transmission pipelines, the resistance against propagating fractures is one of the most important requirements. In order to evaluate the ability of pipe material to resist propagating brittle fractures, the Battelle Drop Weight Tear test (BDWT test) was developed in the 1960ties. The results of BDWT tests coincide very well with full scale pipe behavior typically assessed by means of partial gas (West Jefferson) tests for pipeline materials which were used at that time. It was shown that 85 % shear area on BDWT fracture surface is sufficient for the material to withstand a propagating brittle fracture. Therefore, up to now, the commonly used requirement in product standards is the 85 % shear area criterion in the BDWT test.
Andre Hasenhütl / Marion Erdelen-Peppler / Christoph Kalwa
Erscheinungsdatum
01.01.1970
Format
PDF
Zeitschrift
3R - Special 1 2016
Verlag
Vulkan-Verlag GmbH
Titel
Understanding inverse fracture – comparison between laboratory BDWT & partial gas test
Beschreibung
For the safe operation of gas transmission pipelines, the resistance against propagating fractures is one of the most important requirements. In order to evaluate the ability of pipe material to resist propagating brittle fractures, the Battelle Drop Weight Tear test (BDWT test) was developed in the 1960ties. The results of BDWT tests coincide very well with full scale pipe behavior typically assessed by means of partial gas (West Jefferson) tests for pipeline materials which were used at that time. It was shown that 85 % shear area on BDWT fracture surface is sufficient for the material to withstand a propagating brittle fracture. Therefore, up to now, the commonly used requirement in product standards is the 85 % shear area criterion in the BDWT test.