Pipeline plough performance in sand waves. Part 2: Kinematic calculation method

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Abstract

Offshore pipelines can be buried in the seabed by ploughing a trench, placing the pipe at its base, and then backfilling. The presence of sand waves or megaripples on the seabed surface can affect the progress of the plough and prevent the plough from generating a level trench with a uniform trench depth. A calculation method has been presented that makes assumptions about the motion of the plough to predict the kinematics of ploughs through regions of nonuniform seabeds. Results from the calculation methodology are compared with those from small-scale model tests with good agreement, and the detailed kinematics of ploughs are then examined. The calculation method suggests that as a plough moves through a sand-wave field, the oscillation of the plough about the skids results in the trench base being formed alternately by the share tip and heel. The new method allows prediction of likely offshore plough performance given known plough geometry, sand wavelength, and wave amplitude and may be used as a tool for assessing the feasibility of pipeline ploughing in zones of sand waves or megaripples. © 2010 NRC Canada.

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Bransby, M. F., Brown, M. J., Lauder, K., & Hatherley, A. (2010). Pipeline plough performance in sand waves. Part 2: Kinematic calculation method. Canadian Geotechnical Journal, 47(1), 65–77. https://doi.org/10.1139/T09-091

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