Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
The primary goal of this study was to evaluate the service life of HDPE (High Density PolyEthylene) pipes. The following experimental tasks were carried out: (i) procurement of materials, and fabrication of test setups; (ii) creep evaluation: the performance of buried pipes (notched/unnotched), subjected to live loading, was studied in soil chambers for three levels of loading (service, 2/3 and 1/3 of service). The long-term behavior was accelerated with super-ambient temperatures; (iii) field monitoring: strains and diametral changes were measured for 10,000 hours. The analytical investigations were as follows: (i) extrapolation of the long-term performance at ambient temperature, based on the Bi-directional and the Arrhenius methods and (ii) 2-D Finite Element Analysis, using the software CANDE. The findings include: (i) the deflection threshold (7.5% vertical change of diameter) as the governing failure condition, (ii) similar life predictions, for Bi-directional and Arrhenius methods, with service lives of about 80 and 30 years at ambient temperature, for unnotched and notched specimens, respectively, subjected to maximum loading, and (iii) a reasonable agreement between analytical and experimental values.
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