Abstract

Affected by the underground soil environment, buried cast iron pipelines are subject to corrosion during their long-term service, resulting in damage accumulation to the pipe wall and the eventual fracture failure of pipes. This paper aims to propose a probabilistic method to quantitively assess the time-dependent reliability of fracture failure of corroded cast iron pipes. A Gamma-based corrosion process of the pipe wall is derived according to the reported corrosion models. The first-order reliability method and the Monte Carlo simulation are used to cross-validate and conduct the time-dependent reliability analysis based on the fracture failure criterion. Furthermore, uncertain physical parameters of the pipes are updated by the Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm based on the regional historical data of failed pipes, and lifetime predictions of buried cast iron pipelines are then obtained. A worked example is provided to illustrate the application of the proposed method. It is found that the Gamma process can well simulate the corrosion process hence can be employed to calculate the probability of pipe fracture failure. Sensitivity analysis reveals that the pipe internal water pressure, the fracture toughness, and the geometry of corrosion pits are the most influential parameters to the probability of fracture failure. It is also found that the predicted lifetime of corroded cast iron pipes in the worked example decreases from 110 to 85 years after the Bayesian updating.

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