Geotechnical Engineering Journal of the SEAGS & AGSSEA ISSN 0046-5828
Vol. 45 No.4 December 2014
A Model for Predicting Pipeline Sinkage Induced by Tunnel Scour
Chengcai Luo, Hongwei An, Liang Cheng and David White
ABSTRACT: The current design practice for subsea pipeline on-bottom stability (e.g. DNV-RP-F109) does not account the effect of sediment transport around a pipeline. Both field survey and small scale model test results show that seabed scour has a significant effect on pipeline embedment and therefore stability. Physical model tests carried out in an innovative large experimental facility, named the O-tube, at the University of Western Australia, have shown that tunnel scour and the subsequent pipe sinkage into the scour hole tend to stabilize a pipeline which might otherwise become unstable on an assumed stationary seabed, under ramping-up flow conditions. A simple calculation model that incorporates the three-dimensional scour and pipe sinkage due to the soil bearing capacity failure at the supporting span shoulders is proposed. The model parameters were calibrated using the O-tube experimental results. The model serves as a key element of a new pipeline stability analysis method that takes into account seabed mobility.
KEYWORDS: Pipeline, On-bottom stability, Tunnel scour, Pipe sinkage