- Service · Cornerstone
CAESAR II piping stress analysis for critical lines.
- Service · Cornerstone
CAESAR II Piping Stress Analysis
CAESAR II piping stress analysis is the industry-standard method for verifying that high-temperature, high-pressure, or large-bore piping in refineries, Waste Heat Recovery Unit (WHRU) systems, and power plants remains within safe stress limits across every operating scenario.
Scope of Work
A critical-line analysis models the piping system against every load case it sees in service — sustained, thermal, occasional, and dynamic — then verifies that stresses, displacements, support loads, and equipment nozzle loads remain within allowable limits. The standard scope includes:
- Model build in CAESAR II from validated isometrics
- Sustained load analysis (pipe, fluid, insulation, internal pressure)
- Thermal expansion and contraction analysis
- Occasional load cases — wind, seismic, relief / blowdown
- Equipment nozzle load verification against vendor or API allowables
- Support load extraction for civil and structural design
- Flange leakage verification on critical joints
- Support and restraint optimization (springs, anchors, guides, stops)
- Isometric markup with support type, location, and load tags
- Stress report and executive summary




Critical versus Non-critical Screening
Not every line in a plant requires full CAESAR II modelling. Spending modelling time on lines that do not need it is wasteful; skipping analysis on a line that does need it is unsafe. The screening step decides which lines are critical — requiring full CAESAR II analysis — and which are non-critical, which can be assessed with manual cantilever-beam calculations.
Criteria for full CAESAR II analysis
- Pipe nominal bore greater than 2 inches
- Design temperature above 150 degrees Celsius (or below −29 °C)
- Connection to rotating equipment (pumps, compressors, turbines)
- Connection to sensitive equipment (air-cooled exchangers, fired heaters, WHRU tube-sheets)
- Located in a seismic zone or subject to significant wind loading
- Subject to pulsation or vibration-inducing operations
- Prior history of stress overrun, flange leakage, or support failure
Non-critical line manual calculation
Lines outside the criteria above are assessed by manual cantilever-beam calculation, following the principles set out in ASME B31.3 for simple piping configurations. This reduces engineering cost and turnaround without compromising the stress code check.
Design Data Validation
Every engagement begins with a design data validation pass — a check that every input required for stress analysis is complete, consistent, and aligned with the applicable ASME code. Ninety percent of rework during a piping stress analysis project comes from incomplete or inconsistent input data discovered too late.
What we validate
P&ID Completeness
Line numbering, fluid service, equipment tags.
Line List
Design and operating temperature, pressure, fluid, material, insulation, corrosion allowance.
Isometric Drawings
dimensions, elbow and branch locations, support indication, bill of materials.
Material Specification
Alignment of piping class with line list, allowable stress at design temperature.
Equipment Data Sheets
Nozzle orientation, allowable loads, flexibility requirements, thermal movement data.
Support Standard or Catalogue
Consistency with project specification.
CAESAR II Model Build
Every critical line is rebuilt inside CAESAR II from validated isometric drawings. The model includes pipe routing, wall thickness, fluid and insulation weight, supports, restraints, branch connections, expansion joints, and the boundary conditions at equipment interfaces.
What we apply
- Boundary conditions reflect the actual equipment — stiffness matrices or vendor-supplied flexibility, not default anchors
- Branches modelled as rigid or flexible depending on relative stiffness, never assumed
- Expansion joint constants pulled from supplier data, not generic catalogue values
- Every model peer-reviewed by a second engineer before load cases are applied
What we do not rely on
- Default template libraries that do not reflect the project's material and insulation spec
- Auto-support placement without manual review of walkability, maintenance clearance, and constructability
Load Case Development
Load cases are the heart of the analysis. They must reflect the real operating philosophy of the plant, not a generic template.
Sustained Loads
Pipe, fluid, insulation, internal pressure
Thermal Expansion
From ambient to operating, plus start-up and upset temperatures
Occasional Loads
Wind, seismic, relief / blowdown reactions, slug flow
Displacement Load Cases
Equipment thermal growth, anchor movement, settlement
Dynamic Cases
Pulsation, steam hammer, relief valve discharge (see Dynamic & Seismic Analysis)
Equipment Nozzle and Flange Verification
Forces and moments transferred from piping to connected equipment are verified against vendor allowables or the relevant API code.
- Pump nozzle loads per API 610
- Compressor nozzle loads per API 617 and vendor data
- Steam turbine nozzle loads per NEMA SM-23 or vendor data
- Vessel and exchanger nozzle loads per vendor data sheets
- Flange leakage verification per ASME Section VIII Div 1 App 2 and PCC-1
WHRU and Fired Heater Specialty
Fired heaters and WHRU systems carry some of the largest thermal movements on a refinery or power plant. Transfer lines can see 150 to 300 millimetres of movement. The tube-sheet rotates as tubes expand, and the rotation couples into the connected piping through the manifold. Ignoring tube-sheet rotation leads to underestimated nozzle loads and overstressed transfer piping.
- Manual calculation on Manifold-Tubesheet expansion — thermal growth, tube-sheet rotation
- Inlet and outlet nozzle movement — magnitude and direction
- Integration into the CAESAR II model as displacement load cases
- Cycle load cases where decoke or regeneration envelope exceeds normal operation
- Spring hanger sizing and expansion joint specification for high-movement lines
Support and Restraint Design
Supports are selected to manage pipe movement and distribute loads safely — but the specification has to be buildable. We lean on Softstra’s position inside South Moonsgate Sdn Bhd to keep specifications procurement-ready, not specification-only.
- Rigid supports first, where the geometry allows
- Variable spring hangers where vertical movement warrants load compensation
- Constant-effort spring hangers where displacement is high and load variation must stay within a tight band
- Guides, stops, and anchors placed to control direction without over-restraint
- Snubbers only where dynamic protection is required — never as a substitute for flexibility
Deliverables You Receive
Deliverables are formatted for direct handoff — civil and structural engineers receive the support load table without a translation step, construction teams receive marked-up isometrics, and project engineers receive the executive summary and report.
- CAESAR II model files (native input)
- Comprehensive stress report (PDF) with ASME code clause citations
- Support load table — sized for civil and structural use
- Nozzle load summary versus equipment allowables
- Flange leakage check summary on critical joints
- Marked-up isometric drawings with support type, location, and load tags
- Spring hanger and expansion joint vendor submittal review
- Executive summary highlighting non-conformances and recommendations
- FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
A single critical line typically takes 2–5 working days once inputs are validated. A package of 20–30 critical lines is normally completed in 4–6 weeks.
Both. B31.3 applies to process piping (refineries, petrochemical, chemical). B31.1 applies to power piping (steam, HRSG, WHRU). We confirm the governing code during scope-setting.
Yes. Manual calculation on manifold-tubesheet expansion and nozzle movement is a Softstra specialty. The manual result is integrated into the CAESAR II model of the connected piping as displacement load cases.
Yes. Softstra supplies engineered pipe supports, spring hangers, expansion joints, flanges, and gaskets to the specifications produced in our analysis. Optional — clients may also take the spec to their preferred vendor.
Yes. Reviewing vendor submittals is part of our standard scope and can be included or quoted separately.
Yes. The support load table is formatted for direct handoff to civil and structural teams designing pipe racks, T-supports, and sleepers. No translation step required.
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