• Title/Summary/Keyword: Bilge-keel

Search Result 13, Processing Time 0.017 seconds

Experimental Study of the Free Roll Decay Test for the Evaluation of Roll Damping Coefficients (감쇠계수 산출을 위한 자유 횡동요 감쇠실험 연구)

  • Kim, Namwoo;Kim, Yong Jig;Ha, Youngrok
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.52 no.6
    • /
    • pp.460-470
    • /
    • 2015
  • In general ships and FPSOs, roll damping is very small and consequently roll motion is very large at the roll resonance frequency. Proper evaluation of the roll damping coefficient at the resonance frequency is an important task in the study of roll motion and usually it is done by the analysis of free roll decay tests. The relative decrement method based on energy relation has been used mainly for the evaluation of roll damping coefficient from the roll decay test so far. As another method, the logarithmic decrement method based on equivalent linear decay assumption can be used for the same purpose and it is relatively simple. In this paper, both of the relative decrement method and the logarithmic decrement method are used for the evaluation of roll damping coefficient including quadratic damping from the free roll decay tests, and their results are cross-checked for verifying the obtained damping coefficients. Through applications to a box-type floating body equiped with bilge keels, it is shown that the two methods give almost the same damping coefficients in a practical view point and the cross-check of their results is to be a good tool to prevent a possible error. And also the quantitative effects of the bilge keels on the roll damping of box-type floating body are shown and discussed.

A Study on the Corrosion Loss of Zinc Anodes of the Underwater Shell Plate (선저 아연판의 부식에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Min-Suck;Lee, Jong-Mun;Kim, Jong-Hwa;Kang, Il-Kwon;Kim, Dong-Soo
    • Journal of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Education
    • /
    • v.19 no.1
    • /
    • pp.129-136
    • /
    • 2007
  • The component parts of the shell plate of a ship are steel. but the screw propeller or the bow thruster is a compound of bronze, nickel and aluminum. On account of the these different components between metals of the shell plate, the screw propeller and the bow thruster, which are underwater, the shell plate of a ship is corroded by the action of ionization. Authors investigated the corrosion loss of the zinc anodes which were attached to the bottom shell of the training ship Kaya for about two years. The obtained results were as follows:1. In case of the shell plate the difference of the corrosion loss according to port and starboard was almost nothing. But the corrosion loss of the forward part was more than that of the aftward part.2. There was little difference in the corrosion loss between the forward and the aftward part on the bilge keel.3. The corrosion loss of the fore, midship and aft part on the false keel were 24.7%, 22.4% and 23.9% respectively.4. The corrosion loss of the fore and the aft part on the false keel was more than that of the midship part.5. The corrosion loss of the bow thruster was greater than any other parts.6. The nearer the zinc anode to the screw propeller the more the corrosion loss on the stern frame, and the situation was also same as on the rudder.

Experimental Study on Estimation of Roll Damping for Various Midship Sections (중앙 단면 형상에 따른 횡동요 감쇠 추정 실험 연구)

  • Park, Byeongwon;Jung, Dong Woo;Jung, Jaesag;Park, Inbo;Cho, Seok-Kyu;Sung, Hong Gun
    • Journal of Ocean Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.33 no.4
    • /
    • pp.322-329
    • /
    • 2019
  • The magnitude of the roll motion of a floating structure depends on the roll damping acting on the body. In other words, the roll damping of a floating structure must be accurately obtained in order to precisely evaluate the roll motion. Various methods are used to evaluate the roll damping of a floating structure, such as the linear potential theory, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), and model tests. However, it is difficult to evaluate the roll motion of a floating structure with appendages such as a bilge keel and riser slot due to the limitation of ignoring the viscous effects in the linear potential theory. Among these methods, a model test based on a free decay test and harmonic excited roll motion (HERM) is known to be the most reliable method to estimate the roll damping of the floating structures. In this study, model tests using free decay and HERM techniques were performed in the Ocean Engineering Basin (OEB) of KRISO with various types of midship sections. The roll damping results were estimated based on post-processing methods using both techniques, and the roll damping results were compared.