Digital Engineering for Integrated Modeling and Simulation for Building-Piping Systems Through Interoperability Solutions

Designing piping systems for nuclear power plants involves engineers from multiple disciplines (i.e., thermal hydraulics, mechanical engineering, and structural/seismic) and close coordination with the contractors who build the plant. Any design changes during construction need to be carefully commu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNuclear science and engineering Vol. 196; no. sup1; pp. 260 - 277
Main Authors Crowder, Nicholas, Lee, Joomyung, Gupta, Abhinav, Han, Kevin, Bodda, Saran, Ritter, Christopher
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Taylor & Francis 06.10.2022
Informa UK Limited
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Summary:Designing piping systems for nuclear power plants involves engineers from multiple disciplines (i.e., thermal hydraulics, mechanical engineering, and structural/seismic) and close coordination with the contractors who build the plant. Any design changes during construction need to be carefully communicated and managed with all stakeholders in order to assess risks associated with the design changes. To allow the quick assessment of building and piping design changes through a streamlined building-piping coupled analysis, this paper presents a novel interoperability solution that converts bidirectionally between building information models (BIMs) and pipe stress models. Any design changes during construction that are shown in an as-built BIM are automatically converted into a pipe stress model. Any further design changes due to building-piping interaction analyses are converted back to the BIM for the contractor and other designers to access the latest model. Two case studies are presented to illustrate the bidirectional conversion that allows an integrated coupled analysis of the building-piping system to account for their interactions.
Bibliography:USDOE
AC07-05ID14517
ISSN:0029-5639
1943-748X
DOI:10.1080/00295639.2022.2055705