Leak-before-break (LBB) is a term that has been used for decades in reference to a methodology that means that a leak will be discovered prior to a fracture occurring in service. LBB has been applied to missile casings, gas and oil pipelines, pressure vessels, nuclear piping, etc. LBB also has several technical definitions. For instance, LBB can occur for an axial flaw in a pipe where the penetration of the wall thickness will result in a stable axial through-wall crack. This is LBB under load-controlled conditions. LBB could also occur for a circumferential crack in a pipe with high thermal expansion stresses. This might be LBB under compliant displacement-controlled conditions. Finally, LBB might occur when the flaw is stable under normal operating conditions and remains stable when there is a sudden dynamic event (i.e., seismic loading). This might be a time-dependant inertial LBB analysis. These analyses are deterministic, and could be extended to probabilistic evaluations as well. This paper describes some of the technical LBB approaches, applications, and significance of the methodology used in the applications. [S0094-9930(00)01603-6]
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August 2000
Technical Papers
Leak-Before-Break: What Does It Really Mean?
Gery Wilkowski, President,
Gery Wilkowski, President,
Engineering Mechanics Corporation of Columbus, 3518 Riverside Drive, Suite 202, Columbus, OH 43221
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Gery Wilkowski, President,
Engineering Mechanics Corporation of Columbus, 3518 Riverside Drive, Suite 202, Columbus, OH 43221
Contributed by the Pressure Vessels and Piping Division for publication in the JOURNAL OF PRESSURE VESSEL TECHNOLOGY. Manuscript received by the PVP Division, February 1, 2000; revised manuscript received March 5, 2000. Technical Editor: S. Y. Zamrik.
J. Pressure Vessel Technol. Aug 2000, 122(3): 267-272 (6 pages)
Published Online: March 5, 2000
Article history
Received:
February 1, 2000
Revised:
March 5, 2000
Citation
Wilkowski, G. (March 5, 2000). "Leak-Before-Break: What Does It Really Mean? ." ASME. J. Pressure Vessel Technol. August 2000; 122(3): 267–272. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.556183
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