Estimation of directional wave spectra and hull structural responses based on measured hull data on 14,000 TEU large container ships |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Computational Mechanics – DMC, University of Campinas, R. Mendeleyev 200, CEP 13.083-860, Campinas, Brazil;2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Bristol, Queen''s Building, University Walk, Bristol, BS8 1TR, United Kingdom;3. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Bristol, Queen''s Building, University Walk, Bristol, BS8 1TR, United Kingdom;4. Subsea Equipment Technology, Research Centre, Petrobras, Rua Horácio Macedo 950, CEP 21.941-590, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;1. Centre Internacional de Mètodes Numèrics a l’Enginyeria (CIMNE), Edifici C1, Campus Norte, UPC, Gran Capitán s/n, Barcelona, 08034, Spain;2. Universidad Politécnica de Cataluña (UPC), C. Gran Capitan s/n, Campus Nord, Barcelona, 08034, Spain;3. Compass Ingeniería y SItemas, C. Gran Capitan s/n, Campus Nord, Barcelona, 08034, Spain;1. Graduate School of Engineering Science, Yokohama National University, 240-8501, Kanagawa, Japan;2. Design Department, Onomichi Dockyard Co., Ltd., Hiroshima, Japan;3. Faculty of Engineering, Yokohama National University, 240-8501, Kanagawa, Japan;4. Hull Rules Development Dept., ClassNK, Tokyo, Japan |
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Abstract: | To ensure hull structural strength of container ships in association with their increase in size, it is very important to grasp the hull stress histories all over the hull structure in actual sea state. However, ordinary hull stress monitoring systems are insufficient for this purpose because of the small number of stress sensors actually practicable. Therefore, in this paper, we discuss an approach to reproduce the hull stress responses which are not measured based on the estimated wave spectrum from the limited measurement data. To achieve this, we introduce a new model to estimate directional wave spectra based on measured ship stress responses and ship response functions, and further we estimate other ship responses using the model. To model an arbitrarily shaped directional wave distribution, the 360° direction is discretized into 36 directions of 10-degree intervals instead of using a directional distribution function, and in each direction, the wave spectrum is represented using the Ochi (3P) spectrum with three parameters (average wave period, significant wave height, and kurtosis). The authors discuss the evaluation results based on two stress response combinations, and a comparison is made between the sea state estimates made by the proposed method and the ocean wave hindcast database (JWA). Furthermore, by comparing the significant values and the spectra of the measured response of the ship with the estimated response based on both the estimated sea state by the proposed method and the hindcast sea state, the accuracies of the proposed method and the hindcast method are discussed in terms of ship stress estimation at non-instrumented locations. |
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Keywords: | Container ship Monitoring Directional wave spectrum Wave spectrum estimation Ochi (3P) spectrum Ship stress estimation |
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