Failure & Integrity Assessment

Piping Failure & Integrity Assessment

Evaluation of operating piping systems to identify failure risks before they become incidents. Structured around four assessment domains that account for the majority of piping incidents we see across refineries, petrochemical, and power plants.

ASME B31.3 · PCC-1 · API 610/617

Standards

4 assessment types
Domains

Malaysia · SEA

REGION

Flange Leakage Assessment

Combined-load flange evaluation per ASME B31.3, Section VIII Div 1 App 2, PCC-1.

Overstress ID

Locate piping sections under excessive thermal, pressure, or mechanical load.

Nozzle Load

Pump, compressor, vessel nozzle verification per API 610 / 617 / vendor data.

Support Review

Support load, restraint config, spacing, spring hanger travel verification.

Flange Leakage Assessment

A flange leakage assessment verifies that critical bolted flange joints remain leak-tight under the combined effect of internal pressure, thermal expansion, and external piping loads.

What the assessment covers
Standards applied

ASME B31.3

Section VIII Div 1 App 2

ASME PCC-1

B16.5 / B16.20
When commissioned

Overstress Identification

Pipe overstress identification is the assessment of operating piping against allowable stress limits to locate sections under excessive stress from thermal expansion, pressure, or mechanical loads. The first technical output of most integrity reviews — without knowing where stress is high, remediation cannot be prioritised.

What drives overstress
How we identify it

Equipment Nozzle Load Evaluation

Verifies that forces and moments transferred from piping to connected equipment — pumps, compressors, turbines, vessels, exchangers — remain within the vendor or API allowable envelope. Excessive nozzle loads cause misalignment, nozzle cracking, shortened equipment life, and occasionally catastrophic failure.

Equipment we verify

If first-iteration nozzle loads exceed the allowable envelope, we recommend the most economical remediation — rerouting, flexibility addition (loops, offsets, expansion joints), support or restraint change, or vendor concurrence on a relaxed envelope.

Support and Restraint Review

Evaluates the as-installed and as-operating condition of pipe supports, anchors, guides, and line stops to detect improper restraints, excessive support loads, or insufficient flexibility. Support walkdowns, spring hanger travel verification, and restraint configuration checks are the core of this assessment.

Scope of the review

Support load verification

Confirm that sustained, thermal, and occasional loads on each support remain within the manufacturer's capacity and within the structural steel's load envelope.

Restraint configuration review

Evaluate anchors, guides, and line stops to confirm they are correctly applied and do not over-restrain the line against thermal expansion or settlement.

Support spacing and placement

Assess support spacing to prevent excessive sag, vibration, or local overstress, per recognised practice and piping class.

Spring hanger travel verification

Walkdown verification of actual installed travel indicator position against design cold and hot positions. Mismatch often indicates installation error, support failure, or operating condition drift.

Spring hanger and expansion joint vendor drawing review

Where new spring hangers, expansion joints, or non-standard supports are being specified or replaced, we review vendor submittals against the CAESAR II load and travel envelope — before the hardware leaves the supplier.

When to Commission an Integrity Assessment

Deliverables

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Many operating plants have limited as-built documentation. We work from available P&IDs, isometrics (or walkdown data where drawings are missing), and operating history. Scope and cost scale with data quality.

Yes, where the assessment requires it — typically for spring hanger travel verification, support inspection, and failure investigation.

Yes. Most integrity engagements combine at least two of the four domains. A turnaround preparation scope often covers all four.

Both. Every finding includes a recommended remediation, code-cited, and implementable with piping hardware available in the market.

Yes. A single-joint flange leakage investigation is a common stand-alone scope — typically completed in one to two weeks depending on data quality.