Litcius/Paper detail

Estimating the Long-Term Reliability of Steel and Cast Iron Pipelines Subject to Pitting Corrosion

Robert E. Melchers, Mukshed Ahammed

2021Sustainability12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Water-injection, oil production and water-supply pipelines are prone to pitting corrosion that may have a serious effect on their longer-term serviceability and sustainability. Typically, observed pit-depth data are handled for a reliability analysis using an extreme value distribution such as Gumbel. Available data do not always fit such monomodal probability distributions well, particularly in the most extreme pit-depth region, irrespective of the type of pipeline. Examples of this are presented, the reasons for this phenomenon are discussed and a rationale is presented for the otherwise entirely empirical use of the ‘domain of attraction’ in extreme value applications. This permits a more rational estimation of the probability of pipe-wall perforation, which is necessary for asset management and for system-sustainability decisions.

Topics & Concepts

Gumbel distributionServiceability (structure)Pipeline transportExtreme value theoryCorrosionPitting corrosionPerforationIntegrity managementGeneralized extreme value distributionEnvironmental scienceEngineeringForensic engineeringStructural engineeringMaterials scienceMathematicsMechanical engineeringMetallurgyStatisticsPunchingStructural Integrity and Reliability AnalysisCorrosion Behavior and InhibitionConcrete Corrosion and Durability