• Title/Summary/Keyword: offshore-foundation

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A study on fire design accidental loads for aluminum safety helidecks

  • Kim, Sang Jin;Lee, Jin;Paik, Jeom Kee;Seo, Jung Kwan;Shin, Won Heaop;Park, Joo Shin
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.8 no.6
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    • pp.519-529
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    • 2016
  • The helideck structure must satisfy the safety requirements associated with various environmental and accidental loads. Especially, there have been a number of fire accidents offshore due to helicopter collision (take-off and/or landing) in recent decades. To prevent further accidents, a substantial amount of effort has been directed toward the management of fire in the safety design of offshore helidecks. The aims of this study are to introduce and apply a procedure for quantitative risk assessment and management of fires by defining the fire loads with an applied example. The frequency of helicopter accidents are considered, and design accidental levels are applied. The proposed procedures for determining design fire loads can be efficiently applied in offshore helideck development projects.

Basic Design of a Flange Connected Transition Piece between Offshore Wind Turbine and Monopile Foundation (해상풍력 터빈과 모노파일 하부기초를 연결하는 플랜지 방식 트랜지션 피스의 기본설계)

  • LEE, KANGHEE;PARK, SUNGGYU;KIM, GEONHO;HWANG, TAEGYU
    • Journal of Hydrogen and New Energy
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.160-168
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    • 2020
  • Depending on the water depth and composition of seabed, there exist different alternatives for the wind turbine supporting structures. Among several types of the structures, the monopile foundation is the dominant solution for support structure, accounting for over 80% of the offshore wind turbines in Europe. To develop the monopile foundation suitable for domestic ocean environment, a basic design of a transition piece was carried out. This paper presents the design procedure of a flange connected transition piece and results of the structural safety assessment.

Comparison of residual strength-grounding damage index diagrams for tankers produced by the ALPS/HULL ISFEM and design formula method

  • Kim, Do Kyun;Kim, Han Byul;Mohd, Mohd Hairil;Paik, Jeom Kee
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.47-61
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    • 2013
  • This study compares the Residual ultimate longitudinal strength - grounding Damage index (R-D) diagrams produced by two analysis methods: the ALPS/HULL Intelligent Supersize Finite Element Method (ISFEM) and the design formula (modified Paik and Mansour) method - used to assess the safety of damaged ships. The comparison includes four types of double-hull oil tankers: Panamax, Aframax, Suezmax and VLCC. The R-D diagrams were calculated for a series of 50 grounding scenarios. The diagrams were efficiently sampled using the Latin Hypercube Sampling (LHS) technique and comprehensively analysed based on ship size. Finally, the two methods were compared by statistically analysing the differences between their grounding damage indices and ultimate longitudinal strength predictions. The findings provide a useful example of how to apply the ultimate longitudinal strength analysis method to grounded ships.

Burst strength behaviour of an aging subsea gas pipeline elbow in different external and internal corrosion-damaged positions

  • Lee, Geon Ho;Pouraria, Hassan;Seo, Jung Kwan;Paik, Jeom Kee
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.435-451
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    • 2015
  • Evaluation of the performance of aging structures is essential in the oil and gas industry, where the inaccurate prediction of structural performance can have significantly hazardous consequences. The effects of structure failure due to the significant reduction in wall thickness, which determines the burst strength, make it very complicated for pipeline operators to maintain pipeline serviceability. In other words, the serviceability of gas pipelines and elbows needs to be predicted and assessed to ensure that the burst or collapse strength capacities of the structures remain less than the maximum allowable operation pressure. In this study, several positions of the corrosion in a subsea elbow made of API X42 steel were evaluated using both design formulas and numerical analysis. The most hazardous corrosion position of the aging elbow was then determined to assess its serviceability. The results of this study are applicable to the operational and elbow serviceability needs of subsea pipelines and can help predict more accurate replacement or repair times.

Geotechnical Characterization of the Eardo Seabed for Offshore Pile Foundation Design (해양말뚝 기초설계를 위한 이어도 해저지반의 특성화)

  • Shim, Jae-Seol;Yoon, Gil-Lim;Kown, O-Soon
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.15 no.5
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    • pp.141-155
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    • 1999
  • Korea Ocean Research & Development Institute(KORDI) conducted an offshore geotechnical investigation for the Eardo Ocean Research Station with the help of the Fugro International Limited at a site location approximately 152 km away from Mara Island, Korea. The primary purpose of the geotechnical investigation was to obtain information on soil and foundation conditions, and to develop foundation design data for a fixed offshore observation platform. This paper discussed the details of the geotechnical investigation and the foundation design recommendations for the Ocean Research Station. Clear recommendations were proposed for the foundation type of driven pile considering the existing soil conditions.

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Ship Collision Behaviors of Offshore Wind Tower on Bucket Foundation (버켓기초를 가진 해상풍력타워의 선박충돌 거동)

  • Lee, Gye-Hee;Park, Jun-Seok;Hong, Kwan-Young
    • Journal of the Society of Disaster Information
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.138-147
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    • 2012
  • In this paper, the various parametric study of collisions between a offshore wind tower and vessels were performed to estimate the ultimate behaviors of the bucket foundation and the tower. Additionally, the stability of the foundation and the energy dissipation capacities of the tower were analyzed. The results shows that the collision energy of the vessel was mainly dissipated by the plastic deformation energy of the tower and the foundation system shown enough bearing capacity against to this severe loading condition.

Behavior Analysis by Verticality Error of Monopile Foundation for 5MW Offshore Wind Turbine (5MW급 해상풍력발전기 모노파일 기초의 수직도 오차에 따른 거동 분석)

  • Jang, Hwa Sup;Kim, Ho Sun;Eum, Hark Jin;Kim, Mann Eung
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.32 no.2C
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    • pp.61-68
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    • 2012
  • In general, verticality error necessarily occurs in marine pile foundation due to construction error or marine environmental effects. In marine structure, design by vertical load rather than horizontal load is dominant, but in the offshore wind turbine foundation, horizontal load is dominant. As the structure type that has dynamic movement by blade rotation, verticality error may have structurally significant effects. In this study, structural response feature of foundation and ground were analyzed according to verticality error of monopile foundation of 5MW offshore wind turbine. Marine environmental load was calculated per ISO standard and the margin of verticality error was calculated to be $L/{\infty}$(=0), L/300, L/200 and L/100. As a result of analysis, it was found that the maximum value of member force of the foundation with L/100 error increased about 7.2% compared to the monopile without verticality error.

Load and Structural Analysis of an Offshore Wind-Turbine Foundation with Weight Control Functionality (자중조절 기능이 있는 해상풍력 지지구조의 하중 및 구조해석)

  • Oh, Minwoo;Kim, Donghyun;Kim, Kiha;Kim, Seoktae
    • KEPCO Journal on Electric Power and Energy
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    • v.2 no.3
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    • pp.453-460
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    • 2016
  • Offshore wind turbines are divided into an upper wind turbine and a lower support structure. Offshore wind turbine system is required to secure high reliability for a variety of external environmental conditions compared to ground wind turbines because of additional periodic loads due to ocean wave and current effects. In this study, extreme load analyses have been conducted for the designed offshore wind turbine foundation with weight control functionality using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) then structural analyses have been also conducted to investigate the structural design requirement.

Ultimate strength performance of Northern sea going non-ice class commercial ships

  • Park, Dae Kyeom;Paik, Jeom Kee;Kim, Bong Ju;Seo, Jung Kwan;Li, Chen Guang;Kim, Do Kyun
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.52 no.3
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    • pp.613-632
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    • 2014
  • In the early design stage of ships, the two most important structural analyses are performed to identify the structural capacity and safety. The first step is called global strength analysis (longitudinal strength analysis or hull girder strength analysis) and the second step is local buckling analysis (stiffened panel strength analysis). This paper deals with the ultimate strength performance of Arctic Sea Route-going commercial ships considering the effect of low temperature. In this study, two types of structural analyses are performed in Arctic sea conditions. Three types of ship namely oil tanker, bulk carrier and container ship with four different sizes (in total 12 vessels) are tested in four low temperatures (-20, -40, -60 and $-800^{\circ}C$), which are based on the Arctic environment and room temperature ($20^{\circ}C$). The ultimate strength performance is analysed with ALPS/HULL progressive hull collapse analysis code for ship hulls, then ALPS/ULSAP supersize finite element method for stiffened panels. The obtained results are summarised in terms of temperature, vessel type, vessel size, loading type and other effects. The important insights and outcomes are documented.

Floating offshore wind turbine system simulation

  • Shi, Wei;Park, Hyeon-Cheol;Jeong, Jin-Hwa;Kim, Chang-Wan;Kim, Yeong-Chan
    • 한국신재생에너지학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2009.11a
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    • pp.466-472
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    • 2009
  • Offshore wind energy is gaining more and more attention during this decade. For the countries with coast sites, the water depth is significantly large. This causes attention to the floating wind turbine. Offshore wind turbines are designed and analyzed using comprehensive simulation codes that account for the coupled dynamics of the wind inflow, aerodynamics, elasticity and controls of the wind turbine, along with the incident waves, sea current, hydrodynamics, and foundation dynamics of the support structures. In this work, a three-bladed 5MW upwind wind turbine installed on a floating spar buoy in 320m of water is studied by using of fully coupled aero-hydro-servo-elastic simulation tool. Specifications of the structures are chosen from the OC3 (Offshore Code Comparison Collaboration) under "IEA Wind Annex XXIII-subtask2". The primary external conditions due to wind and waves are simulated. Certain design load case is investigated.

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