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PIPES CONVEYING FLUID: LINEAR DYNAMICS I               107

             area is generally a function of internal pressure; (iii) the pipe has an initial curvature as a
             result of being coiled during manufacture while still warm and of plastic set during storage.
             Of these, item (i) plays no role in the determination of ucd, (ii) is not too important if the
             fluid discharges at x = L  so that the pressure is not too high at any point upstream, and
             (iii) was solved, according to the authors, by hanging the pipes vertically and pouring hot
             water through them.
               In the clamped-pinned  arrangement, the downstream support was provided quite simply
             by a greased steel rod in contact with the downstream end of the pipe. As the flow velocity
             was increased, the  pipe began to bow  slightly. At  a certain critical speed the pipe was
             observed  to  statically diverge rapidly  and  to  slide  completely off  the  steel  rod.  This
             means  that  the  measured  ucd  was  slightly higher  than  the  real  one.  The  experimental
             ucd  = 4.70 nevertheless compares favourably with  the  theoretical  ucd  = 4.49 given  by
             equation (3.90~).
               A more recent, successful experiment for a clamped-pinned  pipe, again with a sliding
             downstream end, was conducted by  Yoshizawa et al. (1985, 1986) and  is discussed in
             Section 5.5.3.
               The main purpose of these studies was to validate items (i)-(iii)  of the first paragraph
             of this section and it was partly achieved. It was also shown, by  the way, that large flow
             velocities are necessary to induce divergence; hence, it  is  unlikely to  arise in  practice,
             except in specialized applications. Nevertheless, there is a high degree of  idealization in
             the systems studied so far; certainly, systems of the type of Figure 3.21 are unlikely to be
             found in engineering applications. In more practical systems, the pipe would not discharge
             to  atmosphere but  would be connected to  another component at  a pressure higher than
             atmospheric [Figure 3.16(a)] - except after an accidental break (Section 4.7); moreover,
             axial sliding, if any, would not occur freely and destabilizing pressurization effects would
             come into play. In the next set of  such studies, the dynamics under these more realistic
             conditions was considered.
               A  careful  study  of  the  effects  of  pressurization  and  tensioning  was  made  by
             Naguleswaran & Williams (1968). Unfortunately, in the paper they  do not  give any of
             the dimensions and properties of their apparatus, nor any of  their results in dimensional
             form. Nevertheless, Naguleswaran ( 1996) was kind enough to provide the approximate
             principal dimensions of  the neoprene pipes used: Do = 15 mm, h = 2mm, and  variable
             length, up to 880mm. The pipe was attached on either side to rigid copper pipes, one of
             which was connected to the water mains and the other, after a certain length, discharged
             to atmosphere. The mean pressure in the whole system could be regulated, presumably
             by valves on the downstream end, so that pressurization was possible. Furthermore, axial
             tension could be  applied by  loading one of  the  copper pipe connections statically and
             then fixing it; thereafter, sliding was prevented (8 = 1). The flow rate was determined by
             collecting and weighing the discharged water over a known time interval. Motions of the
             pipe were sensed at two locations along the span via capacitance transducers. The Poisson
             ratio, v, of  the pipe was determined in special tests by measuring the change in volume
             resulting from axial extension, and EZ was determined from the natural frequency of  a
             short cantilevered length of  the pipe.
               It was found that pressurization affected appreciably the first-mode natural frequency, to
             the extent that the pipe could be made to buckle quite readily without flow. For this reason,
             preliminary tests were made without flow. The variation of  %e(Q1) with l7/r = FA/T
             is shown in Figure 3.24; %e(Ql)~ is the value for the pipe under T but for p = 0. Since
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