• Title/Summary/Keyword: Rankine panel method

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Time-domain analysis of nonlinear motion responses and structural loads on ships and offshore structures: development of WISH programs

  • Kim, Yong-Hwan;Kim, Kyong-Hwan;Kim, Jae-Han;Kim, Tae-Young;Seo, Min-Guk;Kim, Yoo-Il
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.37-52
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    • 2011
  • The present paper introduced a computer program, called WISH, which is based on a time-domain Rankine panel method. The WISH has been developed for practical use to predict the linear and nonlinear ship motion and structural loads in waves. The WISH adopts three different levels of seakeeping analysis: linear, weakly-nonlinear and weak-scatterer approaches. Later, WISH-FLEX has been developed to consider hydroelasticity effects on hull-girder structure. This program can solve the springing and whipping problems by coupling between the hydrodynamic and structural problems. More recently this development has been continued to more diverse problems, including the motion responses of multiple adjacent bodies, the effects of seakeeping in ship maneuvering, and the floating-body motion in finite-depth domain with varying bathymetry. This paper introduces a brief theoretical and numerical background of the WISH package, and some validation results. Also several applications to real ships and offshore structures are shown.

Development of an Optimal Hull Form with Minimum Resistance in Still Water

  • Choi Hee-Jong;Kim Mun-Chan;Chun Ho-Hwan
    • Journal of Ship and Ocean Technology
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.1-13
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    • 2005
  • A design procedure for a ship with minimum total resistance has been developed using a numerical optimization method called SQP (Sequential Quadratic Programming) to search for optimized hull form and CFD(Computational Fluid Dynamics) technique. The friction resistance is estimated using the ITTC 1957 model-ship correlation line formula and the wave making resistance is evaluated using a potential-flow panel method based on Rankine sources with nonlinear free surface boundary conditions. The geometry of hull surface is represented and modified using B-spline surface patches during the optimization process. Using the Series 60 hull ($C_B$ =0.60) as a base hull, the optimization procedure is applied to obtain an optimal hull that produces the minimum total resistance for the given constraints. To verify the validity of the result, the original model and the optimized model obtained by the optimization process have been built and tested in a towing tank. It is shown that the optimal hull obtained around $13\%$ reduction in the total resistance and around $40\%$ reduction in the residual resistance at a speed tested compared with that of the original one, demonstrating that the present optimization tool can be effectively used for efficient hull form designs.

Computational and Experimental Studies on Added Resistance of AFRAMAX-Class Tankers in Head Seas (선수파 중 AFRAMAX급 유조선의 부가저항에 대한 실험과 수치계산)

  • Oh, Seunghoon;Yang, Jinho;Park, Sang-Hun
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.52 no.6
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    • pp.471-477
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    • 2015
  • When a ship sails in a seaway, the resistance on a ship increases due to incident waves and winds. The magnitude of added resistance amounts to about 15–30% of a calm-water resistance. An accurate prediction of added resistance in waves, therefore, is essential to evaluate the performance of a ship in a real sea state and to design an optimum hull form from the viewpoint of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) regulations such as Energy Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) and Energy Efficiency Operational Indicator (EEOI). The present study considers added resistance problem of AFRAMAX-class tankers with the conventional bow and Ax-bow shapes. Added resistance due to waves is successfully calculated using 1) a three-dimensional time-domain seakeeping computations based on a Rankine panel method (three-dimensional panel) and 2) a commercial CFD program (STAR-CCM+). In the hydrodynamic computations of a three-dimensional panel method, geometric nonlinearity is accounted for in Froude-Krylov and restoring forces using simple wave corrections over exact wet hull surface of the tankers. Furthermore, a CFD program is applied by performing fully nonlinear computation without using an analytical formula for added resistance or empirical values for the viscous effect. Numerical computations are validated through four degree-of-freedom model-scale seakeeping experiments in regular head waves at the deep towing tank of Hyundai Heavy Industries.

Parametric Study of Numerical Prediction of Slamming and Whipping and an Experimental Validation for a 10,000-TEU Containership

  • Kim, Jung-Hyun;Kim, Yonghwan
    • Journal of Advanced Research in Ocean Engineering
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.115-133
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    • 2015
  • This paper describes an approach for the numerical analysis of container ship slamming and whipping and various parameters that influence slamming and whipping. For validation purposes, the numerical analysis results were compared with experimental results obtained as part of the Wave-Induced Loads on Ships Joint Industry Project. Water entry problems for two-dimensional (2D) sections were first solved using a 2D generalized Wagner model (GWM) for various drop conditions and geometries. As the next step, the hydroelastic numerical analysis of a 10,000-TEU container ship subjected to slamming and whipping loads in waves was performed. The analysis method used is based on a fully coupled model consisting of a three-dimensional (3D) Rankine panel model, a 3D finite element model (FEM), and a 2D GWM, which are strongly coupled in the time domain. Parametric studies were carried out in both numerical and experimental tests with various forward speeds, wave heights, and wave periods. The trends observed and the validity of the numerical analysis results are discussed.

Computation of Wave Resistance in the Water of Finite Depth Using a Panel Method (패널법을 이용한 유한수심에서의 조파저항 계산)

  • S.J. Lee
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.66-74
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    • 1992
  • A panel method in the spirit of Hess & Smith(1962), and also of Dawson(1977) was developed to compute the wave resistance of a submerged, or a surface piercing, body moving in the water of finite depth. As a boundary condition on the free surface what is called the Poisson equation is used, while Yasukawa(1989) chose the Dawson equation for which the double-body flow is regarded as the basic one. In order to satisfy the boundary condition on the bottom surface automatically, the sum of a Rankine source and its image with respect to the bottom surface is chosen as the Green function, and hence the singularity is distributed only on the body and on the free surface thereby decreasing the required number of panels dramatically, compared to that of Yasukawa, without the consequential loss of accuracy. Calculations were done for a submerged sphere and for the Wigley hull, and the results are compared with other existing analytical and numerical data.

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Nonlinear Flow Characteristics of Two-Dimensional Hydrofoils moving below the Free surface (자유수면하에서 이동하는 2차원 수중익 주위의 비선형 유동특성)

  • Il-Ryong Park;Ho-Hwan Chun
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.8-19
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    • 1998
  • Nonlinear flow characteristics of a hydrofoil running under the free surface are investigated based on potential flow theory using singularity distribution techniques. Following Hess & Smith's method[12], sources and vortices are distributed on the surface of the foil and Rankine sources are distributed at a distance above the undisturbed free surface to solve the nonlinear free surface waves(so called Raised Panel Method). Using the linearized Neumann-Kelvin solution, the conversed solutions which rigidly satisfy the nonlinear free surface condition is obtained through an iterative technique. It is validated that the nonlinear solutions are compared with Duncan's experimental results(NACA 0012, $\alpha=5^{\circ}$), showing good correlations with each other. At a very shallow submergence and a very high speed the converged solutions are obtained. As the speed increases higher, it is shown that the difference between the nonlinear and linear solutions are trivial. Finally, the effects of the camber and thickness on the nonlinear flow characteristics of the foil are investigated.

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Computation of the Hydrodynamic Coefficients of Ships in Waves by Rankine Source Panel Methods (랜킨소오스 패널법을 이용한 파랑중 선박의 동유체력계수 계산)

  • Jin-Ho Yang;Ki-Jong Song;Ho-Hwan Chun
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.43-51
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    • 2001
  • The unsteady problems of ships in waves are analyzed by a low order panel method with Rankine source. Considering the basic flow as the uniform incoming flow(so called Kelvin flow) and also the double body flow. the solutions to satisfy the governing equation with the boundary conditions are obtained, and these two results are compared. The hydrodynamic coefficients for the modified Wigley hull and Series 60($C_B=0.7$) are computed and compared with the experimental data available and also other computational results published. It is shown that the computational results by the double body approximation agree well with the experimental results compared with those by the uniform Kelvin flow approximation.

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Development of an Optimum Hull Form for a Container Ship with Minimum Wave Resistance (최소 조파저항을 가지는 컨테이너선의 선형최적화 기법에 대한 연구)

  • 최희종;서광철;김방은;전호환
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.8-15
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    • 2003
  • This paper presents the method for developing an optimum hull form with minimum wave resistance using SQP(sequential quadratic programming) as an optimization technique. The wave resistance is evaluated by a Rankine source panel method with non-linear free surface conditions and the ITTC 1957 friction line is used to predict the frictional resistance coefficient. The geometry of the hull surface is represented and modified using B-spline surface patches. The optimization method is applied to Series 60 hull and KCS(KRISO 3600 TEU Container Ship). The obtained results prove that the method is appropriate for preliminary hull form design.

Study for Optimal Hull Form Design of a High Speed Ro-Pax Ship on Wave-making Resistance Performance (고속 Ro-Pax선형의 조파저항성능 향상을 위한 최적 선형설계에 관한 연구)

  • Park, Dong-Woo;Choi, Hee-Jong
    • Journal of Navigation and Port Research
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    • v.36 no.10
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    • pp.787-793
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    • 2012
  • A hull form design technique to enhance the wave-making resistance performance for a medium size high speed Ro-Pax ship was studied introducing an optimization method and an automatic hull form modification method. SQP(sequential quadratic programming) was applied as the optimization algorithm and the geometry of hull surface was represented and modified using the NURBS(Non-Uniform Rational B-Spline). The wave-making resistance performance as an objective function in the optimization procedure was evaluated using the Rankine source panel method in which nonlinearity of the free surface boundary conditions and the trim and sinkage of the ship was fully taken into account. Using the Ro-Pax ship as a base hull, the hull-form optimization method was applied to obtain the hull shape that produced the lower wave-making resistance. To verify the validity of the hull-form optimization method, the numerical results was compared with the model test results.

Hull Form Generation of Minimum Wave Resistance by a Nonlinear Optimization Method (비선형 최적화 기법에 의한 최소 조파저항 선형 생성)

  • Hee-Jung Kim;Ho-Hwan Chun
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.11-18
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    • 2000
  • This paper is concerned with the generation of an optimal forward hull form by a nonlinear programming method. A Rankine source panel method based on the inviscid and potential flow approximation is employed to calculate the wave-making resistance and SQP method is also used for the optimization. The hull form is represented by a spline function. The forward hull form of a minimum wave resistance with the given design constraints is generated. In addition, the forward hull form of a minimum total resistance by considering the frictional resistance together with an empirical form factor is produced and compared with the former result.

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