Title: Resistance to Accidental Ship Collisions
1Resistance to Accidental Ship Collisions
2Outline
- General principles
- Impact scenarios
- Impact energy distribution
- External impact mechanics
- Collision forces
- Energy dissipation in local denting
- Energy dissipation in tubular members
- Strength of connections
- Global integrity
3DESIGN AGAINST ACCIDENTAL LOADS
- Verification methods
- Simplified (back of the envelope methods)
- Elastic-plastic/rigid plastic methods
(collision/explosion/dropped objects) - Component analysis (Fire)
- General calculation/Nonlinear FE methods
- USFOS, ABAQUS, DYNA3D..
4NORSOK STANDARDDESIGN AGAINST ACCIDENTAL LOADS
- General
- The inherent uncertainty of the frequency and
magnitude of the accidental loads as well as the
approximate nature of the methods for their
determination as well as the analysis of
accidental load effects shall be recognised. It
is therefore essential to apply sound engineering
judgement and pragmatic evaluations in the
design. - SS
5NORSOK STANDARDDESIGN AGAINST ACCIDENTAL LOADS
- If non-linear, dynamic finite element analysis
is applied all effects described in the following
shall either be implicitly covered by the
modelling adopted or subjected to special
considerations, whenever relevant
6SHIP COLLISION
How much energy has been dissipated? What is the
extent of damage to the platform?
7Grane- impact events to be simulated on Row 2
8Grane - potential impact locations - Row A
9Principles for ALS structural designillustrated
for FPSO/ship collision
- Strength design - FPSO crushes bow of vessel
(ref. ULS design) - Ductility design - Bow of vessel penetrates
FPSO side/stern - Shared energy design - Both vessels deform
- Fairly moderate modification of relative strength
may change the design from ductile to strength or
vice verse
10SHIP COLLISIONDesign principles
- Strength design
- Installation resists collision without
deformation- ship deforms and dissipates major
part of energy - Ductility design
- Installation deforms and dissipates major part
of energy- ship remains virtually undamaged - Shared energy design
- Both ship and installation deform and contribute
substantially to energy dissipation
11SHIP COLLISIONDesign principles- analysis
approach
- Strength design
- The installation shape governs the deformation
field of the ship. This deformation field is used
to calculate total and local concentrations of
contact force due to crushing of ship.The
installation is then designed to resist total and
local forces. - Note analogy with ULS design.
12SHIP COLLISIONDesign principles - analysis
approach
- Ductility design
- The vessel shape governs the deformation field
of the installation. This deformation field is
used to calculate force evolution and energy
dissipation of the deforming installation. - The installation is not designed to resist
forces, but is designed to dissipate the required
energy without collapse and to comply with
residual strength criteria. -
13SHIP COLLISIONDesign principles - analysis
approach
- Shared energy design
- The contact area the contact force are mutually
dependent on the deformations of the installation
and the ship. - An integrated, incremental approach is required
where the the relative strength of ship and
installation has to be checked at each step as a
basis for determination of incremental
deformations. - The analysis is complex compared to strength or
ductility design and calls for integrated,
nonlinear FE analysis. - Use of contact forces obtained form a
strength/ductility design approach may be very
erroneous. -
-
14Stern corner -column collisionDistribution of
energy dissipation- ductile vs. strength design
Weak column left (Alt. 1) Strong column right
(Alt.2)
15Collision Mechanics
- Convenient to separate into
- External collision mechanics
- Conservation of momentum
- Conservation of energy
- Kinetic energy to be dissipated as strain energy
- Internal collision mechanics
- Distribution of strain energy in installation and
ship - Damage to installation
16External collision mechanics
17External collision mechanics
18Ship collision- dissipation of strain energy
The strain energy dissipated by the ship and
installation equals the total area under the
load-deformation curves, under condition of equal
load. An iterative procedure is generally
required
19SHIP COLLISIONForce-deformation curves for
supply vessel (TNA 202, DnV 1981)
Note Bow impact against large diameter columns
only
20SHIP COLLISIONContact force distribution for
strength design of large diameter columns
21SHIP COLLISIONSupply vessel - stern corner
force/distribution
- Local force subset of total force distributed
over smaller area
22SHIP COLLISIONStrength design of large diameter
columns-supply vessel stern impact
For strength design the column shall resist
maximum local concentrations of the collision
force imposed by the deforming supply vessel. The
forces are assumed uniformly distributed over a
rectangular area
23Energy dissipation modes in jackets
24Local denting tests with tubes
25Yield line model for local denting
Measured deformation
26Resistance curves for tubes subjected to denting
Approximate expression including effect of axial
force
27Resistance curves for tubes subjected to denting
Include local denting
If collapse load in bending, R0/Rc lt 6 neglect
local denting
28Relative bending moment capacity of tubular beam
with local dent (contribution from flat region
is conservatively neglected)
29SHIP COLLISIONPlastic resistance curve for
bracings collision at midspan
30SHIP COLLISIONElastic-plastic resistance curve
for bracings collision at midspanFactor c
includes the effect of elastic flexibility at
ends
31Strength of connections (NORSOK N-004 A.3.8)
32Strength of adjacent structure
33Ductility limitsRef NORSOK A.3.10.1
- The maximum energy that the impacted member can
dissipate will ultimately - be limited by local
buckling on the compressive side or fracture on
the tensile side of cross-sections undergoing
finite rotation. - If the member is restrained against inward axial
displacement, any local buckling must take place
before the tensile strain due to membrane
elongation overrides the effect of rotation
induced compressive strain. - If local buckling does not take place, fracture
is assumed to occur when the tensile strain due
to the combined effect of rotation and membrane
elongation exceeds a critical value
34Tensile Fracture
- The degree of plastic deformation at fracture
exhibits a significant scatter and depend upon
the following factors - material toughness
- presence of defects
- strain rate
- presence of strain concentrations
- Welds normally contain defects. The design should
hence ensure that plastic straining takes place
outside welds (overmatching weld material)
35Tensile Fracture
- The critical strain in parent material depends
upon - stress gradients
- dimensions of the cross section
- presence of strain concentrations
- material yield to tensile strength ratio
- material ductility
- Critical strain (NLFEM or plastic analysis)
36 Critical deformation for tensile fracture in
yield hinges
37Tensile fracture in yield hinges
- Proposed values for ecr and H for different steel
grades
Steel grade ecr H S 235 20 0.0022 S
355 15 0.0034 S 460 10 0.0034
38Global integrity during impact