GB2066882A - Inground fluid storage tank and method of erection thereof - Google Patents

Inground fluid storage tank and method of erection thereof Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2066882A
GB2066882A GB8015964A GB8015964A GB2066882A GB 2066882 A GB2066882 A GB 2066882A GB 8015964 A GB8015964 A GB 8015964A GB 8015964 A GB8015964 A GB 8015964A GB 2066882 A GB2066882 A GB 2066882A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
shell
gabions
tank
roof
drainage
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Granted
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GB8015964A
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GB2066882B (en
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BARTUR J
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BARTUR J
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Publication of GB2066882A publication Critical patent/GB2066882A/en
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Publication of GB2066882B publication Critical patent/GB2066882B/en
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04HBUILDINGS OR LIKE STRUCTURES FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSES; SWIMMING OR SPLASH BATHS OR POOLS; MASTS; FENCING; TENTS OR CANOPIES, IN GENERAL
    • E04H7/00Construction or assembling of bulk storage containers employing civil engineering techniques in situ or off the site
    • E04H7/02Containers for fluids or gases; Supports therefor
    • E04H7/18Containers for fluids or gases; Supports therefor mainly of concrete, e.g. reinforced concrete, or other stone-like material

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Revetment (AREA)

Abstract

An inground storage tank, particularly for storage of oil and inflammable liquids comprises a concrete wall (17) enclosing a steel shell (9) and surrounded by a water impervious sheet of plastics material (14) and a mantle of gabions (13). The gabions (13) allow water drainage to drainage ducts (3, 4) in the foundations (1) of the wall (17). The steel shell (9) has a conical roof structure (19) welded thereto and a layer of earth (23) on the roof (19). Columns (11) within the shell (9) support the roof (19). The tank is constructed by constructing the foundations (1) and drainage ducts (3, 4) and then building a portion of wall (17), and shell (9), filling the shell (9) with water, surrounding the wall (17) with plastics sheet (14) and gabions (13) and repeating these steps until the required height is reached. The roof (19) is then secured to the shell (9). <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Inground fluid storage tank and method of erection thereof The present invention relates to inground fluid storage tanks and to a method for the erection of such a tank. In particular, the invention is applicable to storage tanks for oil or other inflammable liquids.
Generally heretofore, such tanks have been built of concrete with an interior shell constructed of thin steel sheets, i.e. similar to above-ground tanks but with concrete walls around them. Such tanks are costly to build and because of problems associated with drainage around the tanks after a period of time it is usual for water to penetrate the concrete wall and to cause corrosion of the steel shell, so that replacement or costly repair becomes necessary.
It is also known to provide concrete tanks lined with an epoxy layer. However, inevitably after a time cracks occur in the concrete and leakage of the fluid from within the tank through such cracks then takes place.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an inground fluid storage tank which avoids or at least substantially alleviates the aforementioned disadvantages associated with known tanks. It is also an object of the invention to provide a convenient method for the construction of such a tank.
The invention provides an inground fluid storage tank comprising a wall structure mounted on a foundation and enclosing a metal shell comprising shell walls and a roof secured thereto, drainage ducts in said foundation connected to soil water disposal means, a plurality of gabions surrounding said wall structure and through which water may pass, said gabions being in fluid flow connection with said soil water disposal means, and a sheet of water impervious material disposed between said gabions and said wall structure.
Preferably the drainage ducts comprise radial ducts connected to a peripheral duct and said soil water disposal means comprises a drainage shaft.
Preferably said metal shell comprises a plurality of steel sheets which are welded together, and said wall structure may be of concrete and may comprise a plurality of horizontal rims integral with the walls of said wall structure.
The roof of said metal shell may be of conical form and be welded to said shell walls. Preferably said roof is supported by beams inclined upwardly and inwardly from said shell walls and may also be supported by one or a plurality of columns disposed within said metal shell. Said column or columns are preferably substantially vertical. The roof may also comprise a central section formed of prefabricated concrete segments.
Preferably said water impervious sheet is of polyethylene.
The tank may be covered by a layer of earth.
The invention also provides a method of forming an inground fluid storage tank comprising forming a foundation having drainage ducts therein, connecting said drainage ducts to soil water disposal means, constructing on said foundation a first portion of a wall structure and a first portion of metal shell within said portion of wall structure, subsequently constructing other portions of metal shell until said metal shell is of a predetermined height, whilst after the construction of each portion of metal shell filling said shell with water, providing a plurality of gabions through which water may pass to surround and be spaced from said portion of metal shell and to be in fluid flow connection with said drainage ducts, constructing a corresponding portion of wail structure in said space, and providing a sheet of water impervious material between said gabions and said portion of wall structure and securing a roof to the last constructed portion of said metal shell.
The construction of the tank is generally as follows.
The bottom is constructed of steel on an asphalt bed and the wall structure is made of concrete according to locally existing standards.
Trenches are radially spaced in the foundation and connected to the peripheral trench, so that any leakage in the bottom of the tank will be detected in the drainage shaft, built near the tank.
The metal shell on the inside of the wall structure is erected in the same manner as a standard steel shell of an above-ground tank, but the thickness of the welded plates is the minimum thickness based on the erection requirements, as hereinafter described.
Around the steel shell, and wall structure, a mantle of gabions filled with stones is gradually, step by step, erected.
The whole internal side of the gabions is covered by polyethylene sheets. The space between the gabions and the steel shell is filled by the concrete wall structure.
Above every ring of gabions, a concrete rim is cast.
Every ring of gabions is connected separately to the drainage shaft.
The outer, conical part of the roof is connected to and is supported by the shell wall.
The central part of the roof is supported by columns.
The concrete of the conical part of the roof is cast on a steel ring, welded to the shell.
The central part of the roof is made of prefabricated concrete elements, and a layer of concrete may be superimposed thereon.
The invention will now be described further, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which Figure 1 is a sectional view of the tank structure; Figure2 illustrates the constructional details of the wall.
After the excavation of the site and the casting of the foundation, the bottom surface is planed and a layer of asphalt concrete (1) is formed thereon. A steel bottom (2) of the shell is built on the asphalt concrete layer (1).
In the foundation of the wall, under the steel bottom, there are provided radial drainage trenches (3), leading to a peripheral trench (4). The peripheral trench is connected by a steel pipe (5) to a drainage shaft (6). A tunnel (7) is constructed from the drainage shaft to the manhole (8) in the wall.
After erecting 7.5 metres of the steel shell (9) and welding the steel pieces (10) for reinforcement and contruction of columns (11), the tank is filled with water to a height of 6 metres.
The first concrete rim (12) is cast.
The first gabion ring (13) is built on the concrete rim after laying a polyethylene sheet (14) on the inner side of the gabions construction.
The next step is to lower down a drainage pipe (15) between the gabions ring and the shaft, and to fill the excavation with earth (16) to the height of the gabions ring.
Now, a concrete wall (17) is cast between the gabions and the steel shell and also the next rim (18).
After the concrete has been strengthened, the tank is filled to a height of 7 metres with water, and the cycle of constructing the gabions, earth filling and concrete casting is repeated.
In this way the vertical complex wall is completed.
Aconical steel shell (19) is constructed on sloped beams (20), welded to the vertical steel shell.
Meanwhile, the structure (21) supporting the flat central roof is elevated on columns, and prefabricated concrete segments (22) are placed on the structure, and the roof is completed by casting in situ. On the roof, a layer of earth (23) is placed.
In the tank of the present invention, the thickness of the steel sheets from which the metal shell is constructed may be the minimum allowed by virtue of locally prevailing regulations, for example BSS 2654 or Standared No. 650 of the American Petroleum Institute. The thickness of the concrete wall structure is determined by calculations taking into account the height and diameter of the completed tank, the thickness of the steel shell, the support from the soil surrounding the tank, including the manner of filling in the excavated site, and the support due to the hydrostatic pressure within the shell. The thickness of the roof is determined having regard to the thickness of the layer of soil to be placed thereon, whilst the conical shape of the roof allows for adequate support for such soil layer whilst keeping the thickness of the roof to a minimum.
The use of gabions surrounding the wall structure of the tank provides support for the wall structure, the easy and therefore non-costly casting of the concrete of the wall structure and the efficient drainage of the area surrounding the wall structure.
The water impervious layer is preferably polyethylene since such material possesses a high degree of water resistance, has good mechanical properties such as abrasion resistance, tensile strength and resistance to tearing (shear strength) and is a readily available material. However, other water impervious materials may be used.

Claims (18)

1. An inground fluid storage tank comprising a wall structure mounted on a foundation, and enclosing a metal shell comprising shell walls and a roof secured thereto, drainage ducts in said foundation connected to soil water disposal means, a plurality of gabions surrounding said wall structure and through which water may pass, said gabions being in fluid flow connection with said soil water disposal means, and a sheet of water impervious material disposed between said gabions and said wall structure.
2. A tank according to Claim 1, wherein said drainage ducts comprise a plurality of ducts extending radially of said tank and connected to a duct extending around the periphery thereof.
3. A tank according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said metal shell comprises a plurality of steel plates welded together.
4. A tank according to any one of Claims 1 to 3, wherein said wall structure is of concrete.
5. A tank according to Claim 4, wherein said wall structure comprises a plurality of horizontal rims formed integrally with walls of said wall structure.
6. A tank according to any one of Claims 1 to 5, wherein said roof is, at least in part, of conical form.
7. A tank according to Claim 6 wherein said roof is, at least in part, of steel and is welded to said shell wails.
8. A tank according to Claim 6 or Claim 7 wherein said roof is supported by beams extending upwardly and inwardly from said shell walls.
9. A tank according to Claim 8 wherein said roof is further supported by at least one column disposed within said metal shell.
10. A tank according to Claim 9, wherein said column or columns is substantially vertical.
11. A tank according to any one of Claims 6 to 10, wherein said roof comprises a central section formed of preformed concrete segments.
12. Atank according to any one of Claims 1 to 11, wherein said water impervious sheet is of polyethylene.
13. An inground tank comprising afoundation with radial and peripheral trenches connected to a drainage shaft, an inner steel shell, an outer mantle of gabions and a concrete wall with horizontal rims cast between the steel shell and the gabions, each ring of gabions being connected separately to the drainage shaft, the inner surface of the gabions being covered before casting the concrete by a polyethylene sheet, a conical steel shell constructed on sloped beams and welded to a vertical steel shell, central columns supporting the central roof built from prefabricated concrete segments, the complete tank being covered buy a layer of earth.
14. A tank substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
15. A method of forming an inground fluid storage tank comprising forming a foundation having drainage ducts therein, connecting said drainage ducts to soil water disposal means, constructing on said foundation a first portion of a wall structure and a first portion of metal shell within said portion of wall structure, subsequently constructing other portions of metal shell until said metal shell is of a predetermined height, whilst after the construction of each portion of metal shell filling said shell with water, providing a plurality of gabions through which water may pass to surround and be spaced from said portion of metal shell and to be in fluid flow connection with said drainage ducts, constructing a corresponding portion of wall structure in said space, and providing a sheet of water impervious material between said gabions and said portion of wall structure, and securing a roof to the last constructed portion of said metal shell.
16. A method according to Claim 15, comprising the steps of, casting a foundation with drainage ducts therein, connecting said ducts to a drainage shaft, constructing a base and a first wall portion of said metal shell on said foundation, constructing a first portion of at least one column within said shell, filling said shell with water, casting a first rim of said wall structure, providing a plurality of gabions on said rim after laying a water impervious sheet internally of said gabions, casting a first portion of said wall structure between said gabions and said shell and repeating the aforementioned steps with subsequent wall portions of shell until said shell is of a predetermined height, and securing a roof to the last constructed wall portion of shell.
17. A method for erecting an inground tank structure according to Claim 15 comprising casting the foundation with the drainage trenches, building the steel bottom on the asphalt concrete, connecting the peripheral trench by steel pipe to a drainage shaft, constructing a tunnel from the drainage shaft to manhole in the wall, after erecting 7.5 metres of the steel shell, welding the steel pieces for reinforcement and constructing inner columns, filling the tank with water to a height of 6 metres, casting the first ring, building the first gabions ring on the concrete rim after laying a polyethylene sheet on the inner side of the gabions construction, lowering down a drainage pipe between the gabions ring and the shaft, filling the excavation with earth to the height of the gabions ring, casting the concrete wall between the gabions and the steel shell, and also casting the next rim; after the concrete has been strengthened, filling the tank with water to a height of 7 metres, and repeating the cycle of constructing the gabions, earth filling and concrete casting to the desired height, constructing conical steel shell on sloped beams welded to the vertical steel shell; elevating the structure supporting the flat central roof on columns, and placing the prefabricated concrete segments on the structure.
18. A method of constructing an inground storage tank substantially as herein before described.
GB8015964A 1979-11-12 1980-05-14 Inground fluid storage tank and method of erection thereof Expired GB2066882B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IL58684A IL58684A (en) 1979-11-12 1979-11-12 Underground oil tank and method for erection thereof

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2066882A true GB2066882A (en) 1981-07-15
GB2066882B GB2066882B (en) 1983-05-25

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8015964A Expired GB2066882B (en) 1979-11-12 1980-05-14 Inground fluid storage tank and method of erection thereof

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IL (1) IL58684A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0159382A1 (en) * 1984-04-26 1985-10-30 Toschi Produktions-GmbH Construction, particularly a bulk (liquid) container
WO1986001559A1 (en) * 1984-09-05 1986-03-13 Neste Oy Cistern for liquid or gas, constructed of reinforced concrete

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0159382A1 (en) * 1984-04-26 1985-10-30 Toschi Produktions-GmbH Construction, particularly a bulk (liquid) container
WO1986001559A1 (en) * 1984-09-05 1986-03-13 Neste Oy Cistern for liquid or gas, constructed of reinforced concrete
GB2176230A (en) * 1984-09-05 1986-12-17 Neste Oy Cistern for liquid or gas, constructed of reinforced concrete

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2066882B (en) 1983-05-25
IL58684A (en) 1982-11-30
IL58684A0 (en) 1980-02-29

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