SPE Drilling & Completion
Volume 27,
Number 4,
December 2012,
pp. 493-500
Summary
Coiled tubing is a continuous pipe that, having been coiled around a reel
for storage, can be deployed and used as a pipeline or riser. During deployment
as a riser, the coiled tubing is unspooled from the reel, run into the water,
and connected to the wellhead. This process plastically strains the pipe,
causing plastic (or low-cycle) fatigue damage. When the coiled tubing is
connected to the wellhead, the environmental loading causes elastic-stress
cycles, resulting in elastic (or high-cycle) fatigue damage. Numerous methods
are available to determine fatigue life from either plastic or elastic cycling;
however, few data are available within the industry on how the fatigue damages
from elastic and plastic cycles combine. This paper presents the experimental
work conducted to show the combined fatigue life of notched samples of flat
steel used to manufacture coiled tubing that has been plastically and
elastically cycled. The data show that the combined fatigue life can be lower
than the total of the plastic and elastic fatigue damages by use of Miner's
rule. Existing theory suggests that the combined fatigue life could be as low
as 10% of the Miner?s-rule fatigue damages; however, the experimental data
indicate that a more appropriate value is closer to 75%.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
17 May 2011
- Meeting paper published:
6 April 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
8 June 2012
- Manuscript approved:
21 August 2012
- Published online:
17 October 2012
- Version of record:
11 December 2012