What Is the Minimum Vacuum Pressure Before a Stainless Steel Pipe Collapses?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on determining the minimum vacuum pressure that a stainless steel pipe can withstand before collapsing under atmospheric pressure. Key points include the need for a pipe buckling calculation to assess critical buckling pressure, with references to relevant literature and equations for guidance. The pipe's dimensions are specified, but its length remains unspecified due to its installation in ductwork. Suggestions include reviewing external pressure buckling resources and considering the wall thickness to diameter ratio in calculations. Proper evaluation of these factors is essential to ensure structural integrity under vacuum conditions.
Bryan Sutter
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I have a length of pipe where air is being pulled through by a high powered fan at one end. The pipe is stainless steel, outer diameter is 100 inches. the thickness is 0.125 inches. I need to know what is the minimum vacuum pressure inside the pipe can be before the atmospheric pressure will collapse the steel?
 
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Have you done a pipe buckling calculation to determine its critical buckling pressure?
 
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Bryan Sutter said:
I have a length of pipe where air is being pulled through by a high powered fan at one end. The pipe is stainless steel, outer diameter is 100 inches. the thickness is 0.125 inches. I need to know what is the minimum vacuum pressure inside the pipe can be before the atmospheric pressure will collapse the steel?
Welcome to the PF.

Can you add a fan at the input to the pipe to minimize the gauge pressure on the pipe wall? How long is the pipe?
 
Mech_Engineer said:
Have you done a pipe buckling calculation to determine its critical buckling pressure?
Can you elaborate on this? You aren't referring to Euler's column buckling formula are you?
 
berkeman said:
Welcome to the PF.

Can you add a fan at the input to the pipe to minimize the gauge pressure on the pipe wall? How long is the pipe?
The input of the pipe is inside a tank, so I do not believe adding a fan at this location is possible. As to the length it is ductwork going through a large plant, so I do not have length on hand, but it is quite long.
 
For a reference on your problem got to: http://web.ornl.gov/info/reports/1962/3445605700239.pdf

And for something that might help review the set of tables starting on pg 439 of: http://ijiset.com/vol2/v2s12/IJISET_V2_I12_50.pdf

These and a list of other pertinent items will be found with a web search under the title "external pressure buckling of pipes or tubes"
 
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Bryan Sutter said:
Can you elaborate on this? You aren't referring to Euler's column buckling formula are you?

This http://web.ornl.gov/info/reports/1962/3445605700239.pdf .

Roark's Formulas for Stress and Strain also includes a section titled "Thin Tube Under Uniform lateral External Pressure; Very Long Tube with Free Ends", which is a set of equations for calculating buckling strength of pipes. You may be limited based on your wall thickness to diameter ratio, so pay close attention to the stated limits of any formulas you might find.
 
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