Abstract

Station and valve chamber design often encounter the situation of drilling hole at the main pipeline and welding boss-backing to connect the branch pipe. Boss hole location should generally be at least 100 mm away from the longitudinal weld or spiral weld. However, because the electric resistance weld (ERW) is difficult to distinguish in practice, some bosses mounting position coincide with ERW or close to. In this paper, the influence of boss-backing welding directly on the longitudinal weld to the original residual stresses of ERW pipe was studied. The microstructure of pipe body and longitudinal weld after welding was also analysis. The testing results showed that the overall residual stresses of ERW pipe were relatively small. Residual stress at the longitudinal weld region were smaller than those at the pipe body region. After the boss-backing welding, the axial residual stress at the longitudinal weld and the circumferential residual stress at the pipe body region near the intersection increased sharply to 2.5 (444 MPa) and 3.8 (433 MPa) times, respectively. The invaded width and depth to the ERW pipe after welding were about 15.167 mm and 3.376 mm. Granular bainite with necklace type M-A constituents could be observed at the invaded zone. It is suggested that small welding heat input should be adopted for boss-backing welding.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call