The Use of X-Bracing in Fixed Offshore Platforms

1973 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 75-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.E. Knapp

Abstract Elastic stability criteria are derived for an X-brace where both members are axially loaded. Solutions are obtained for both pinned- and fixed-end conditions and for axial load conditions of one member in compression - while the other has compression tension, w zero axial load. The results are presented as curves that can be used by designers to determine an effective length factor K, which reflects the degree of lateral support furnished to the primary compression member by the cross-member. A comparison between an X-braced jacket and a conventional jacket reveals that, by the use of X-bracing, the weight of the primary bracing members can be reduced by 2 percent. Introduction The production of hydrocarbons offshore has always centered about the fixed platform. Such platforms when first developed for shallow waters platforms when first developed for shallow waters of the Gulf of Mexico consisted of a low deck supported by bare piling. As water depths increased, it became necessary to brace the piling with a jacket. Today these concepts are still being utilized for platforms in 200 to 400 ft of water. Present offshore platform designs are often heavy Present offshore platform designs are often heavy and bulky. Whereas the need for an innovative look at platform configurations for 1,000 ft of water has been recognized, innovative thinking also needs to be applied to current designs for shallower water. The proper use of X-bracing can result in the design of more efficient structures. Several platforms incorporating X-bracing have been installed platforms incorporating X-bracing have been installed in the Gulf of Mexico. Such usage by Amoco has proved very satisfactory as the structures were proved very satisfactory as the structures were lighter, less expensive to fabricate, and easier to install. The benefits from X-bracing may become more significant in platforms designed for even deeper waters and more hostile environments. Occasionally designers do not take full advantage of the X-brace. They fail to recognize that the "effective column length" of the compression member can be significantly reduced if support furnished by the cross-member is taken into account. Curves presented in this paper provide a designer with the appropriate values of the effective length factor, K, to be used in conjunction with the AISC specifications. Equations for the elastic stability of the X-brace, from which these curves have been prepared, are derived in the Appendix. Examples prepared, are derived in the Appendix. Examples are presented that illustrate the advantages of X-bracing and demonstrate the use of the effective length factor curves. PRINCIPLE OF THE X-BRACE PRINCIPLE OF THE X-BRACE In order to understand the behavior of X-bracing, it is necessary to recognize that the jacket is basically a three-dimensional truss. Loads applied to the structure are reacted primarily by axial forces in the members, although bending and torsional moments are also developed due to wave loads on individual members and due to joint translations and rotations at the ends. Consider the X-bracing shown in Fig. 1. Customarily, both members ABC and DBE will have the same cross-sectional properties, and similar lengths L and a. One may first visualize this X-brace as consisting of two independent single-diagonal members. The shear through the bent is distributed between both members; one member is always in tension whenever the other is in compression. If, for example, member ABC in Fig. 1 is the compression member, buckling in any lateral direction may occur. SPEJ P. 75

1989 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Picard ◽  
Denis Beaulieu

In structural systems like diagonal cross-bracings, the out-of-plane deformation of the compression members is restrained by the tension members. The purpose of the theoretical study presented in this paper is to determine the transverse stiffness provided by the tension members and to evaluate the effect of this stiffness on the out-of-plane buckling of the compression members. Two practical cases are considered. The compression member is restrained against out-of-plane buckling by one tension member connected at midpoint or by two tension members connected at third points.The theoretical study shows that the transverse stiffness provided by the tension members does not have to be very large to obtain a significant decrease in the effective length factor. It is also shown that the transverse stiffness depends on the ratio of the axial compression force to the axial tension force and that the effective length factor increases with this ratio. However, even for large values of this ratio, the effective length factor is much smaller than 1.0. For instance, when the axial tension force is 0 and the ratio of the out-of-plane moment of inertia of the tension member to that of the compression member is 1.0, the effective length factor is approximately equal to 0.71 instead of 1.0 for both practical cases studied. Key words: stability, elastic buckling, elastic supports.


2002 ◽  
Vol 02 (04) ◽  
pp. 499-521
Author(s):  
WEN-HAE LEE ◽  
CHING-CHURN CHERN

During a severe earthquake, plastic hinges can occur at the ends of beams or columns of a high-rise steel frame. Because of this, the critical load of a steel column of the frame cannot be evaluated directly from the conventional alignment charts. In this study, the inelastic stability characteristic equations for five types of substructures that cover a total of twenty-two stability modes for steel columns are derived, from which the critical load Pcr and effective length factor K of a column of the frame in the inelastic stage are solved. The results show that the inelastic effective length factors K computed for the steel columns are larger than those for the elastic case for some modes, meaning that the inelastic critical load is less than the elastic critical load for the same steel column. Thus, the seismic lateral resistant capacity of a steel frame is overestimated if the columns of the frame are designed solely based on the elastic stability analysis.


2006 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-43
Author(s):  
Sándor Richter

The order and modalities of cross-member state redistribution as well as the net financial position of the member states are one of the most widely discussed aspects of European integration. The paper addresses selected issues in the current debate on the EU budget for the period 2007 to 2013 and introduces four scenarios. The first is identical to the European Commission's proposal; the second is based on reducing the budget to 1% of the EU's GNI, as proposed by the six net-payer countries, while maintaining the expenditure structure of the Commission's proposal. The next two scenarios represent radical reforms: one of them also features a '1% EU GNI'; however, the expenditures for providing 'EU-wide value-added' are left unchanged and it is envisaged that the requisite cuts will be made in the expenditures earmarked for cohesion. The other reform scenario is different from the former one in that the cohesion-related expenditures are left unchanged and the expenditures for providing 'EU-wide value-added' are reduced. After the comparison of the various scenarios, the allocation of transfers to the new member states in terms of the conditions prevailing in the different scenarios is analysed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aldo Aquino-Cruz ◽  
David Uriel Hernández-Becerril ◽  
Martha Signoret-Poillon ◽  
David Alberto Salas-de-León ◽  
María Adela Monreal-Gómez

The abundance and distribution of total autotrophic picophytoplankton (PFP), temperature, salinity, PAR, and chlorophyll a were determined in two presumably contrasting environments: (1) two coastal areas (close to the mouths of three rivers), and (2) one oceanic area (Campeche Canyon), of the southern Gulf of Mexico, during the "dry season" (June-July, 2004). The picoprokaryotes Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus were identified by TEM, whereas Synechococcus and picoeukaryotes populations were also recognized by flow cytometry. The highest PFP abundance (1.67×105 cells ml-1) was found in shallow waters (~10 m depth) around the Grijalva-Usumacinta river mouth, followed by that found at a station close to the Coatzacoalcos River (1.19×105 cells ml-1); PFP abundances in the Campeche Canyon were usually lower (maximum 1.53×104 cells ml-1). Greater variability in PFP abundances was found in coastal stations than in oceanic waters, and weak relationships appeared between the patterns of chlorophyll a and PFP abundance. Peaks of PFP were detected in both coastal and more oceanic areas, but in the Campeche Canyon they were located deeper (60 m), relatively closer to the deep maximum of chlorophyll (located at about 75 m). Results suggest that PFP populations include a substantial photosynthetic component in both coastal and oceanic waters of the southern Gulf of Mexico.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (24) ◽  
pp. 5434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hani H. Tawfik ◽  
Karim Allidina ◽  
Frederic Nabki ◽  
Mourad N. El-Gamal

This paper presents a novel dual-level capacitive microcantilever-based thermal detector that is implemented in the commercial surface micromachined PolyMUMPs technology. The proposed design is implemented side-by-side with four different single-level designs to enable a design-to-design performance comparison. The dual-level design exhibits a rate of capacitance change per degree Celsius that is over three times higher than that of the single-level designs and has a base capacitance that is more than twice as large. These improvements are achieved because the dual-level architecture allows a 100% electrode-to-detector area, while single-level designs are shown to suffer from an inherent trade-off between sensitivity and base capacitance. In single-level designs, either the number of the bimorph beams or the capacitance electrode can be increased for a given sensor area. The former is needed for a longer effective length of the bimorph for higher thermomechanical sensitivity (i.e., larger tilting angels per degree Celsius), while the latter is desired to relax the read-out integrated-circuits requirements. This thermomechanical response-to-initial capacitance trade-off is mitigated by the dual-level design, which dedicates one structural layer to serve as the upper electrode of the detector, while the other layer contains as many bimorph beams as desired, independently of the former’s area.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4683 (4) ◽  
pp. 531-551
Author(s):  
DARRYL L. FELDER ◽  
RAFAEL LEMAITRE ◽  
CATHERINE CRAIG

Coloration, gene-sequence data (H3, 12s, 16s), and subtle features in morphology support the description of two new species, both formerly regarded to represent accepted variants of Phimochirus holthuisi s.l. While color in life consistently separates these species from P. holthuisi s.s. and from each other, morphological distinctions are subtle and less than absolute in small specimens, being based on ventral spine counts of walking leg dactyls and relative development of the superior crest on the major chela. Molecular phylogenetic analyses clearly support the separation of sister clades, representing two new species, from P. holthuisi s.s. as well as other congeners available for analysis. Both of the new species are presently known to occur widely throughout the northern Gulf of Mexico, though one occurs more commonly in the northeastern and southeastern Gulf, and may range as far south as Suriname. The other has been taken primarily in the northwestern Gulf, and is not known from outside Gulf waters. While both of the new species appear restricted to relatively deep subtidal waters of the continental shelf, Phimochirus holthuisi s.s. is instead more commonly found in shallow nearshore tropical waters on or near coral reefs. Previous literature reports of P. holthuisi usually represent, at least in part, one or both of these two new species. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 1607 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. P. VAN OFWEGEN ◽  
V. HÄUSSERMANN ◽  
G. FÖRSTERRA

Four new species of Alcyonium (Octocorallia: Alcyoniidae) are described from Chile. They occur in the shallow waters of the southern fjord region. One of them is an encrusting species, the other three form digitate colonies. Encrusting forms of A. grandis Casas et al., 1997, and A. haddoni Wright & Studer, 1889 were also found in the fjord region, bringing the number of Alcyonium species recorded for Chile to eight. For all six recently collected species SEM images of sclerites are presented, and a key to the Chilean Alcyonium species is included.


2009 ◽  
Vol 135 (9) ◽  
pp. 1034-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bendito ◽  
M. L. Romero ◽  
J. L. Bonet ◽  
P. F. Miguel ◽  
M. A. Fernandez

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