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Compression Fit HDPE Pipe – Another Proven Pipeline Replacement Method

Parul Dubey on July 28, 2023 - in News, Projects

The new 36-inch HDPE pipe replaces the corroded ductile iron pipe in the Sioux Falls, SD sewer system.  Photo credit:  Murphy Pipeline

 

ASTM Standard Codifies Method for Gravity and Pressure Pipe for Both Water and Force Main Projects

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – It wasn’t a typical, normal sliplining job to replace a failing force main line here.  The original ductile iron pipe had deformed and had severe ovality.  Hydrogen sulfide gas from the sewage flow made sulfuric acid, which collected at the top of the metal pipe and destroyed it.  It was thought that pulling through a new pipe wouldn’t be possible as it would hang up on the deformed inner wall of the old pipe.  Reducing the diameter was not possible — the diameter of the new pipe needed to be as close to the old one to maintain the rate of flow.  The solution provided by Murphy Pipeline Contractors (Jacksonville, FL) was to use high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe and compress it to fit, knowing that the thermoplastic pipe would naturally reform itself.

          “This is one of the inherent attributes of HDPE pipe,” stated Camille George Rubeiz, P.E., F. ASCE, co-chair, HDPE Municipal Advisory Board, and senior director of engineering for the Plastics Pipe Institute’s (PPI) Municipal & Industrial Division.  “As well as being corrosion proof, it is flexible and ductile to go through a special die on the job site that makes it possible to be pulled inside a host pipe even when the pipe is not round.  In this case, the ovality would have no affect during installation and the HDPE pipe would form a tight compression fit within the old ductile iron pipe.”  PPI is the major North American association representing the plastic pipe industry.

          More than 8,700 feet of 36-inch ductile iron sewer force main was replaced with HDPE     PE 4710, DR 21 pipe using Murphy’s CompressionFit™ method, patent pending.  The new pipe has a 100-psi operating and a 200-psi surge pressure rating, and is rated as a Class 6 solution in accordance with ASTM F3508.  The sewer force main traversed under three city parks, along Covell Lake, through major commercial districts and under state highway SD 115.  It was made and provided by WL Plastics (Fort Worth, TX), a member company of PPI.

Opened in 1985, the Sioux Falls system treats some 18 million gallons of wastewater daily.  There are 900 miles of pipe in the system that conveys the wastewater to the city’s treatment plant.  There is a $215 million expansion plan underway that will increase the facility’s capacity by 50 percent when completed in 2025. 

          “One of the questions we were asked was ‘Can a 36-inch ductile iron sewer force main with severe ovality be replaced with HDPE pipe using CompressionFit?’”, said HDPE pipe industry expert and consultant Harvey Svetlik, P.E.  “The answer was an unequitable ‘yes’.  Matter of fact, some other recent projects saw 54-inch diameter pipe with a three-inch wall thickness installed using the CompressionFit method.  One of the principal things that this technology does is that it preserves the flow rate of the existing host pipeline and seals over holes and leaks, so you have a dual-wall composite pipeline.  And the thicker HDPE pipe provides structural integrity.”

Svetlik has more than 40 years of experience in the plastic pipe industry, specializing in polyethylene pipes and fittings.  He is the inventor of the MJ Adapter, also known as the Harvey Adapter.  An active member of PPI for 30 years, he is the author of numerous PPI technical notes, developer of ASTM/AWWA standards, and an inventor who holds 16 patents.

One of the most recent ASTM standards authored by Svetlik is ASTM F3508 for the installation of compressed fit shape memory polymer pipe.  “ASTM F3508 codifies the specification of the material to use and deals with the shape memory characteristics of the material such as high-density polyethylene. 

          “With the CompressionFit technology, instead of elongating a rubber band and letting it recover as is done with Swagelining, they basically do a lot more of radial compression.  Instead of stretching it and thinning the wall, they downsize it and radially thicken the wall, such that when it goes into place it enlarges in diameter, and the radial wall thickness stands as it expands out, like rolling out pie dough.”

          The developer of CompressionFit is Murphy Pipeline Contractors (Jacksonville, FL).  “Most cities cannot afford to relocate and replace a 16-inch diameter or larger pipeline within their vast utility network,” said Todd Grafenauer, education director for Murphy.  “The result of the CompressionFit HDPE pipe lining technology is that a new HDPE pipe will be ‘compressive fit’ inside the existing host pipe.  This lining offers remarkable value over other construction methods such as an increased flow rate over sliplining, we do an average pull distance of 2,000 feet with more than a 90 percent reduction in excavation and there’s no new easement documentation needed.  Plus, we simply follow the existing pipe path using GIS maps.”  Murphy is a member company of PPI and also part of the association’s Municipal Advisory Board (MAB).

Governed by ASTM F3508, the CompressionFit HDPE pipe lining technology specifies an HDPE pipe with an outside diameter larger in size than the inside of the host pipe to be renewed.  After the HDPE is butt fused to correspond to the pull distance, the pipe is pulled through a reduction die immediately before entering the host pipe.  This reduces the HDPE pipe temporarily below the inside diameter of the host pipe allowing it to be inserted.

          While the towing load keeps the HDPE under tension during the pull, the pipe remains in its reduced size.  The HDPE remains fully elastic throughout the reduction and installation process. After installation, the pulling load is removed.  The HDPE pipe expands until it is halted by the inside diameter of the host pipe.  The effectively natural ‘tight’ or ‘compression fit’ is accepted as exchanging an existing failing pipeline with a composite pipe in its place.

          “One of the things about the ASTM F3508,” Svetlik explained, “is that it can be utilized not only for municipalities for gravity flow, but even more ideally for pressure pipes for water pipeline replacement, or force main replacement.”

More information can be found at www: plasticpipe.org/municpalindustrial

About PPI:
The Plastics Pipe Institute, Inc. (PPI) is the major North American trade association representing the plastic pipe industry and is dedicated to promoting plastic as the materials of choice for pipe and conduit applications.  PPI is the premier technical, engineering and industry knowledge resource publishing data for use in the development and design of plastic pipe and conduit systems.  Additionally, PPI collaborates with industry organizations that set standards for manufacturing practices and installation methods.

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