Experimental investigation of green water on deck for a CFD validation database

2012 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 47-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun-Ho Lee ◽  
Ho-Jeong Lim ◽  
Shin Hyung Rhee
Author(s):  
Csaba Pakozdi ◽  
Carl-Trygve Stansberg ◽  
Paal Skjetne ◽  
Wei Yang

Severe storms have gained more attention in recent years. Improved metocean data have led to new insight into severe wave conditions for marine design. Therefore, there exists an industrial demand for fast and accurate numerical tools to estimate the hydrodynamic loads during e.g. green water events. Model tests generally play an important role in these studies. In the recent past, several practical engineering tools have also been developed, based on the experience from the experimental data bases in combination with simplified but still theoretical formulations. One such tool is Kinema2, which is based on non-linear random wave modeling combined with 3D linear diffraction theory to initially identify green water events, and then finally apply a simplified water-on-deck and slamming load estimation. This forms the background for the work presented in this paper which shows the feasibility of a new technique based on the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH). This method can give more detailed forecast of the hydrodynamics on the deck than the simplified water-on-deck estimation. SPH uses a Lagrangian framework (particles) to describe the fluid dynamics. The water propagation and kinematics of the green water events are, in this introductory stage of the study, reproduced by using a SPH inlet condition where particles are injected with given velocity from a curved rectangular area against the deck and the deckhouse. The relative wave height and water particle velocities found from KINEMA2. Numerical results for water elevation and velocity on deck are compared against model test time series and previous results from other numerical simulation methods. The present Lagrangian nature (compared to traditional Eulerian-VOF methods) can in principe significantly reduce the CPU demand and increase the simulation speed. Slamming pressures can then be calculated e.g. from simple slamming formula calculations. In principle, pressures can also be found directly from the SPH calculations, while this would demand a significantly larger number of particles which increases CPU demand of the SPH method.


1998 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 715-731 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Hamoudi ◽  
K.S. Varyani
Keyword(s):  

2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 234-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Guedes Soares ◽  
R. Pascoal

Results of an experimental program with a model of a moored floating production storage and offloading vessel are used to study the probability distributions associated with various phenomena related with green water loading. Separate analysis of wave height and crests are performed in order to assess the presence and significance of nonlinearities. Time series of pitch motion and relative motion are analyzed to check for linearity of the response process. Probability distributions of the occurrence of water on deck and of the conditional distribution water height above deck are also studied.


Author(s):  
Hui Li ◽  
Bao-Li Deng ◽  
Shu-Zheng Sun ◽  
Wen-Lei Du ◽  
Hao-Dong Zhao

This paper presents the results of an experimental investigation of green water loads on a wave-piercing tumblehome ship. A water tank experiment was carried out in head regular waves by using a self-propelling segmented ship model. Wave probes and pressure sensors were arranged on the bow deck along the longitudinal and transverse directions. The height of water and the impact pressure on the deck were measured and their distributions in different wave conditions studied. The motion of the water flowing on the deck was recorded by a high-speed video system. Based on the experimental results, it was found that the green water is more serious with the increase of incident wave height and ship speed. The bow shape has little effects on the occurrence of green water, but it influences the green water loads to some extent. The distribution of green water pressure is different from that of green water height due to the strong nonlinearity of green water pressure.


2007 ◽  
Vol 581 ◽  
pp. 371-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. GRECO ◽  
G. COLICCHIO ◽  
O. M. FALTINSEN

The water-shipping problem is modelled in a two-dimensional framework and studied experimentally and numerically for the case of a fixed barge-shaped structure. The analysis represents the second step of the research discussed in Greco et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 525, 2005, p. 309). The numerical investigation is performed by using both a boundary element method and a domain-decomposition strategy. The model tests highlight the occurrence of dam-breaking-type water on deck, (a) with and (b) without an initial plunging phase, and (c) an unusual type of water shipping connected with blunt water–deck impacts here called a hammer-fist type event never documented before. Cases (a) and (c) are connected with the most severe events and the related features and green-water loads are discussed in detail. A parametric analysis of water-on-deck phenomena has also been carried out in terms of the local incoming waves and bow flow features. We classify such phenomena in a systematic way to provide a basis for further investigations of water-on-deck events. The severity of (a)-type water-on-deck events is analysed in terms of initial cavity area and water-front velocity along the deck. The former increases as the square power of the modified incoming-wave (front-crest) steepness while the latter scales with its square-root. The two-dimensional investigation gives useful quantitative information in terms of water-front velocity for comparison with three-dimensional water-on-deck experiments on fixed bow models interacting with wave packets.


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