Abstract

This paper presents the improvement of a widely used burst capacity model for steel oil and gas pipelines that contain longitudinal external surface cracks, namely the CorLAS model, through the addition of a correction factor that is quantified by the Gaussian process regression (GPR). The correction factor is assumed to depend on four non-dimensional input features that characterize both the crack geometry and pipe material properties. A database consisting of 212 full-scale burst tests of pipe specimens that contain longitudinal surface cracks is established based on the open literature, which is employed to train the GPR model and evaluate its performance. It is shown that GPR is highly effective in improving the accuracy of the CorLAS model predictions. The improvement is further shown to have a marked effect on the time-dependent probability of burst of pipelines containing growing surface cracks through two hypothetical pipeline examples: when employing the CorLAS model, the probabilities of burst are significantly higher, exceeding those obtained using the improved CorLAS model by more than one order of magnitude.

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