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APPENDIX G

SUGGESTED GOOD PRACTICE REGARDING


PIPING REACTIONS AND DESIGN OF SUPPORTS
AND ATTACHMENTS

G-1 at the support may serve to reduce secondary stresses


and, if desired, a complete ring of thicker wall plates
A vessel supported in a vertical or horizontal position
may be installed.
will have concentrated loads imposed on the shell in
(d) When superimposed forces on the vessel wall
the region where the supports are attached. Primary
occurring at the attachment for principal struts or gussets
and secondary stresses due to other loadings, such as
and supports of any kind can produce high bending
the weight of water present for hydrostatic test, may
stresses, and when thicker wall plates do not seem
exceed that due to normal internal pressure. Calculations
appropriate, an oval or circular reinforcing plate may
to resist the forces involved are not given here because
be used. The attachment of such reinforcing plates
they involve so many variables depending upon the
should be designed to minimize flexing of the plate
size and weight of vessels, the temperature of service,
under forces normal to the surface of the vessel.
the internal pressure, the arrangement of the supporting
structure, and the piping attached to the vessel as
installed.
G-3
Vertical vessels may be supported on a number of
G-2 posts without substantial ring girder bracing them around
the shell, provided they attach to the shell where the
The details of supports should conform to good
latter is reinforced in an equivalent manner by the head
structural practice, bearing in mind the following items
of the vessel or by an intermediate partition.
(see Manual for Steel Construction, latest edition, by
the American Institute of Steel Construction).
(a) All supports should be designed to prevent exces-
sive localized stresses due to temperature changes in G-4
the vessel or deformations produced by the internal Where vertical vessels are supported by lugs, legs,
pressure. or brackets attached to the shell, the supporting members
(b) External stays in ring girders, or any internal under these bearing attachments should be as close to
framing that may support other internal parts, may also the shell as possible to minimize local bending stresses
exert a stiffening effect on the shell. in the shell.
(c) Columns supporting field assembled vessels and
bearing loads which may produce high secondary
stresses in the vessel wall should be so designed at
G-5
the attachment to the wall that no high stress concentra-
tion can occur near changes in shape, gusset plates if For large and heavy vertical vessels to be supported
any, or at ends of attachment welds. It is preferable by skirts, the conditions of loading under hydrostatic
to use details permitting continuous welds extending tests, before pressure is applied, or for any possible
completely around the periphery of the attachment and combination of loadings (see UG-22) under the highest
to avoid intermittent or deadend welds at which there expected metal temperature in service for the normal
may be local stress concentration. A thicker wall plate operating pressure, shall be compared in determining

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G-5 APPENDIX G — NONMANDATORY G-9

the best location for the line of skirt attachment. In may be reinforced by stiffening rings at intermediate
applying UG-22 and UG-23(a) to vertical vessels sup- sections.2
ported on skirts, the following shall be considered in
addition to pressure effects:
(a) the skirt reaction: G-7
(1) the weight of vessel and contents transmitted Large horizontal storage tanks for gases under pres-
in compression to the skirt by the shell above the level sure may be supported by any combination of hangers,
of the skirt attachment; with ring girders, stiffeners, and such other reinforce-
(2) the weight of vessel and contents transmitted ment as may be necessary to prevent stresses in the
to the skirt by the weight in the shell below the level shell in excess of those allowed by UG-23 and to
of skirt attachment; prevent excessive distortion due to the weight of the
vessel when the internal pressure is near atmospheric.
(3) the load due to externally applied moments and
forces when these are a factor, e.g., wind, earthquake, or
piping loads. G-8
(b) the stress in the vessel wall due to the effects
enumerated in (a) above. Localized longitudinal bending Certain attachments may serve to mount a pump,
compressor, motor, internal combustion engine, mixer,
and circumferential compressive stresses of high order
or any other rotating or reciprocating equipment upon
may exist in the metal of the shell and skirt near the
a vessel. Such equipment can cause cyclic forces to
circle of the skirt attachment if the skirt reaction is
act upon the attachment, upon the attachment weld to
not substantially tangent to the vessel wall. When the
the vessel, upon the vessel shell, and upon the vessel
skirt is attached below the head tangent line, localized
supports. For such cyclic loading, the practices advo-
stresses are introduced in proportion to the component
cated in G-2(c) and (d) above are of particular impor-
of the skirt reaction which is normal to the head surface tance. It is important to avoid resonance between the
at the point of attachment; when the mean diameter cyclic forces imposed by the equipment and the natural
of skirt and shell approximately coincide and a generous frequency of the vessel with the equipment in place.
knuckle radius is used (e.g., a 2:1 ellipsoidal head), the
localized stresses are minimized and are not considered
objectionable. In other cases an investigation of local G-9
effects may be warranted depending on the magnitude
of the loading, location of skirt attachment, etc., and Additional guidance on the design of supports, attach-
ments and piping reactions may be found in the follow-
an additional thickness of vessel wall or compression
ing references:
rings may be necessary.
(a) British Standard BS-5500, Specification for Fu-
sion Welded Pressure Vessels (Advanced Design and
Construction) for Use in the Chemical, Petroleum, and
Allied Industries;
(b) Welding Research Council Bulletin #107, Local
G-6
Stresses in Spherical and Cylindrical Shells Due to
Horizontal vessels may be supported by means of External Loadings;
saddles1 or equivalent leg supports. For other than very (c) Welding Research Council Bulletin #198, Part
small vessels, the bearing afforded by the saddles shall 1, Secondary Stress Indices for Integral Structural At-
extend over at least one-third of the circumference of tachments to Straight Pipes; Part 2, Stress Indices at
the shell. Lug Supports on Piping Systems;
Supports should be as few in number as possible, (d) Welding Research Council Bulletin 297, Local
preferably two in the length of the vessel. The vessel Stresses in Spherical and Cylindrical Shells Due to
External Loadings, Supplement to WRC-107.
1
See “Stresses in Large Cylindrical Pressure Vessels on Two Saddle
2
Supports,” p. 959, Pressure Vessels and Piping: Design and Analysis, See Transactions ASCE, Volume 98 — 1931 “Design of Large
A Decade of Progress, Volume Two, published by ASME. Pipe Lines.”

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COPYRIGHT American Society of Mechanical Engineers


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