pressurebearing
Pressurebearing is an adjective describing the ability of a material, structure, or component to withstand applied pressure without failure. In engineering contexts, pressure-bearing elements are designed to resist internal pressure (as in pressure vessels) or external pressure (as in underwater hulls and buried conduits). The key performance metric is the pressure rating or design pressure, linked to properties such as yield strength, ultimate tensile strength, rigidity, and fracture toughness, as well as to geometric factors and loading conditions. Materials used include metals (e.g., steels, aluminum alloys), polymers, composites, and ceramics, selected for strength, corrosion resistance, and manufacturability. Design often follows codes and standards that specify allowable stresses, safety factors, and testing requirements.
For vessels and piping, pressurebearing design involves hydrostatic or pneumatic pressure tests, plus nondestructive examination. For
Key considerations include corrosion, fatigue, creep at elevated temperature, seal and gasket reliability, and inspection intervals.