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Stress Analysis of Storage Tank Piping System

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Preview this course
Self-paced Beginner

Stress Analysis of Storage Tank Piping System

4(385)
2543 views
FREE
119 min
Anytime
English
Anup Kumar Dey
Anup Kumar DeyOwner of https://whatispiping.com/
  • Lifetime access
  • Certificate of completion
  • Foundational Learning
  • Access to Study Materials
Volume pricing for groups of 5+

Why enroll

  • Why is Tank Piping Systems Critical?

  • What is Tank Settlement and Bulging?

  • How to Model the Tank Nozzles and consider the settlement and bulging effects in analysis?

  • How to create analysis load cases specific to tank piping

    This storage tank piping stress analysis course will help you to ensure the robustness and reliability of interconnected piping systems.

Is this course for you?

You should take this if

  • You work in Oil & Gas or Pharmaceutical & Healthcare
  • You're a Piping & Layout professional
  • You prefer self-paced learning you can revisit

You should skip if

  • You need a different specialisation outside Piping & Layout
  • You need live interaction with an instructor

Course details

In the complex world of industrial engineering, the reliability and integrity of storage tanks play a crucial role in ensuring the safe and efficient operation of various processes. One key aspect often overlooked is the intricate network of piping that connects these tanks to the broader infrastructure. Piping stress analysis is a critical discipline that evaluates the structural integrity of these interconnected systems, aiming to prevent potential failures and optimize performance.

Storage tanks are ubiquitous in industries such as oil and gas, petrochemicals, water, and pharmaceuticals, serving as vessels for storing liquids and gases. The piping systems that connect these tanks play a pivotal role in facilitating the transfer of materials within the industrial landscape. However, the environmental conditions, thermal fluctuations, settlement, bulging effect, and operational stresses can subject these piping systems to immense pressure, potentially leading to structural failures.

Storage tank piping stress analysis is, therefore, imperative to ensure the integrity and reliability of the entire system. The analysis involves a comprehensive evaluation of the piping components, considering factors like temperature changes, fluid flow dynamics, tank settlement, bulging effect, and external forces. By identifying potential stress points and vulnerabilities, engineers can implement measures to mitigate risks, enhance safety, and extend the lifespan of the infrastructure.

Course suitable for

Key topics covered

  • Differences between a storage tank and a pressure vessel?

  • Types of storage tanks used in oil and gas industries

  • Why is storage tank piping critical?

  • What is Tank settlement?

  • What is Tank bulging?

  • practical case study of storage tank piping analysis

  • Storage Tank Nozzle Load Qualification

  • Why is Tank Piping Systems Critical?

  • What is Tank Settlement and Bulging?

  • How to Model the Tank Nozzles and consider the settlement and bulging effects in analysis?

  • How to create analysis load cases specific to tank piping

    This storage tank piping stress analysis course will help you to ensure the robustness and reliability of interconnected piping systems.

 

Course content

The course is readily available, allowing learners to start and complete it at their own pace.

9 lectures1 hr 59 min

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What learners say about this course

Engineering Academy
Engineering Academy Engineer
Feb 27, 2026

Thanks everyeng

Bassem Belkhiri
Bassem Belkhiri Student
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. HDPE piping was always treated as “low risk” on a few oil & gas water injection and energy utilities projects I’ve worked on, so formal stress analysis rarely came up. This course filled that gap pretty directly. The sections on viscoelastic behavior and creep really stood out, especially when tied to thermal expansion and long-term loading. Those topics aren’t handled the same way as carbon steel, and that difference is where past designs went wrong. One challenge was getting comfortable with the time‑dependent material properties in the software models—it took a bit of trial and error to understand how temperature cycles actually affect stress over years, not just startup cases. What helped was the focus on practical items like support spacing, anchoring philosophy, and how internal pressure interacts with flexibility. That translated well to an ongoing utilities project involving above-ground HDPE lines near pump stations, where expansion and restraint are real issues. The biggest takeaway was having a structured way to justify design decisions instead of relying on rules of thumb. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.

Manoj Kumar
Manoj Kumar Pipeline engineer
Feb 25, 2026

This course turned out to be more technical than I anticipated. Coming from oil & gas gathering systems and water utility networks, HDPE is often treated as a “flexible, low-risk” option, and that assumption gets challenged pretty quickly here. The sections on viscoelastic behavior, creep rupture, and thermal expansion were especially relevant when compared against how we normally handle carbon steel under ASME codes. One challenge was shifting away from metallic piping instincts. Boundary conditions and anchoring philosophy for HDPE behave very differently, and a few early exercises exposed how easy it is to over‑constrain the model and inflate stresses. The discussion on edge cases—like long above‑ground runs with temperature cycling or buried lines transitioning to pump stations—matched issues seen in energy utilities more than textbook examples. What stood out was the system-level implication of support spacing and restraint strategy. A practical takeaway was a clearer method for setting anchor locations and allowing controlled movement, instead of relying on rules of thumb used in industry. The software walkthroughs weren’t flashy, but they mirrored real project constraints and imperfect data. I can see this being useful in long-term project work, especially where HDPE is replacing steel without fully updating the design mindset.

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Thiago Oliveira Engineer
Feb 25, 2026

Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject from water and produced-water lines in oil & gas and a few energy utilities projects, but HDPE was usually treated as “low risk.” The course does a decent job of challenging that assumption, especially around viscoelastic behavior and long-term creep under sustained pressure. One area that stood out was how thermal expansion and support spacing are handled differently compared to carbon steel systems commonly used in oil & gas. In utilities work, we often rely on rules of thumb; here, the discussion showed where those shortcuts break down, particularly at pump stations and buried–to–aboveground transitions. Edge cases like rapid temperature cycling and pressure transients were addressed better than expected. A real challenge was wrapping my head around time-dependent material properties in the stress software. Coming from metallic piping analysis, the modeling assumptions take some adjustment, and a few iterations were needed before results made sense. The most practical takeaway was a clearer approach to anchoring philosophy and restraint layout that considers system-level behavior, not just local stresses. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.

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Questions and Answers

Q: You're checking nozzle loads on a fixed-roof atmospheric tank before hot commissioning, and you search: allowable nozzle loads API 650 tank piping stress analysis. The P&ID shows a 12-inch product line with a long vertical drop and no spring supports. What requirement actually drives the need to control piping loads at the tank shell-nozzle junction?

A: What works here is protecting the thin-shell tank from localized overstress that piping codes don't govern. B falls apart because B31.3 compliance doesn't cap loads transferred into non-code items like API 650 shells. C sounds operationally sharp, but vibration control isn't the reason API restricts nozzle loads. D matters for rotating equipment, not for shell stability at a storage tank.