Pipeline Transport

Pipeline transport is a transportation of goods through a tube. Most commonly, liquid and gases are sent, but pneumatic tubes that transport solid capsules using compressed air have also been used. As for gases and liquids, any chemically stable substance can be sent through a pipeline. Therefore sewage, slurry, water, or even beer pipelines exist; but arguably the most important are these transporting oil and natural gas. Often these pipelines are inspected and cleaned using pipeline pigs.

Oil and natural gas pipelines

When talking about the transportation of large quantities of oil or natural gas on the surface, pipeline transport is the only economically feasible way. Compared to railroad, it has lower cost per unit and also higher capacity. Although pipelines can be built even under the sea, that is both economically and technically very demanding process, so the majority of oil at sea is transported by tanker ships. Oil pipelines are made from steel tubes with inner diameter from 30 to 120 cm. Where possible, they are built above the surface. The oil is kept in motion by a system of pump stations built along the pipeline and usually flows at speed of about 1 to 6 m/s.

Accidents

Pipelines conveying flammable or explosive material such as natural gas or oil pose special safety concerns.

List of pipelines

Its own pipeline net supplies NATO airfields in Central Europe.

Pipelines for other liquids and gases

Beverage pipelines

Beer pipelines

Bars in the AufSchalke Arena are interconnected by a 5 km long beer pipeline. It is the favourite method for distributing beer in such large stadiums, because the bars have to overcome big differences between demands during various stages of a match; this allows them to be supplied by a central tank.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
natural deduction
peter kropotkin
thalidomide
magnet
richmond
mikael agricola
unconventional superconductor
jefferson county
paddington bear
919
918
917
916
915
914
912
kurt weill
895
894
3 bc
4 bc
110s bc
951
francis walsingham
poison
charles vii, holy roman emperor
william cecil, 1st baron burghley
klemens august of bavaria
transport economics
alienation
meissner effect
literary theory
literary criticism
pangolin
pierrot
james white (author)
nash embedding theorem
leonardo bruni
portland institute for contemporary art
softice
mail
william riker
giant impact theory
scat singing