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An empirical model for bending capacity of defected pipe combined with axial load

Phan, H.C. and Le, T.-T. and Bui, N.D. and Duong, H.T. and Pham, T.D. (2021) An empirical model for bending capacity of defected pipe combined with axial load. International Journal of Pressure Vessels and Piping, 191: 104368. ISSN 3080161

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Abstract

Buried pipes suffer from various natural and human-related phenomena leading to the bending forces on such structures. The analytical models face obstacles such as the complications in modeling material behavior and the local stress concentration due to the appearance of defects are combined. This causes the accumulative over and under-estimation of pipe capacity due to the idealizations of full plastic stress distribution and location of defects at the most dangerous area, respectively. Consequently, such models are not appropriate in the case that defects are not located on the bending plane. The Finite Element, FE, approach is used to overcome these difficulties with the appearance of defects is randomly propagated around the pipe. Additionally, the bilinear material model is also applied accounting for the shape of actual stress-strain curves in a simplified manner. Various Finite Element Analyses are conducted consequently to have an extensive FE database with 772 samples labeled by the bending capacity of the corresponding pipe. To avoid the difficulties for users due to the requirement of coding skill, statistics, and advanced mathematics knowledge, and the implicit appearance of the conventional data-driven models, an empirical model, which can be explicitly expressed, has been developed. The main process of developing such a model is to optimize the design variables in the reduction factors. The objective function is chosen as the Mean Absolute Error of the predicted versus simulated reduction factor. The proposed model has been validated with the high accuracy of R-square at 0.9929 on the test set reveals an improvement compared to other available models. © 2021

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Faculties > Faculty of Control Engineering
Institutes > Institute of Techniques for Special Engineering
Identification Number: 10.1016/j.ijpvp.2021.104368
Uncontrolled Keywords: Defects; Plastic pipe; Stress concentration; Stress-strain curves; Bilinear material model; Data-driven model; Design variables; Local stress concentration; Mean absolute error; Objective functions; Reduction factor; Simulated reduction; Finite element method
Additional Information: Language of original document: English.
URI: http://eprints.lqdtu.edu.vn/id/eprint/8639

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