The Effects Of Current On Probabilistic Fatigue Analysis Of Fixed Offshore Platforms

1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce G. Wade ◽  
Ernest G. Langley ◽  
S.C. Wu
Author(s):  
Qin Feng ◽  
Richard Large

Spectral fatigue analysis approach is highly recommended for fixed offshore platform design and reassessment by API. This method is a computationally efficient method, being able to handle the random nature of environmental ocean wave conditions during calculating wave loads on the offshore platforms and subsequent structural responses. However, its fundamental theory is based on the assumption of linearity of both structural system and wave loading mechanism. Although this method is critically appropriate to be applied in offshore platform design and fatigue assessment for deep water scenarios where wave and force nonlinearities are not very severe, it has still been widely utilized for the design and assessment of shallow water platforms in offshore industry without carefully considering possible errors caused by strong nonlinear factors between ocean waves and forces. The source giving rise to the errors is because of the difficulties in choosing suitably correct wave heights for a series of wave periods required for producing transfer functions between sea state spectra and structural response spectra. Therefore, the studies to justify the possible errors of the spectral fatigue analysis method for shallow water platforms have been provoked. This paper presents the results of the studies of investigating the errors from currently existing spectral fatigue analysis method. A new technical approach that can reduce the errors in the spectral fatigue analysis of shallow water platforms is introduced. The proposed technical approach is mainly focused on producing realistic transfer functions between sea state spectra and structural response spectra, which can reasonably reflect the individually local sea state data by using wave height-period joint probability density function. Hence the fatigue damage and life at the tubular joints of offshore platforms can be more precisely predicted. The spectral fatigue analysis of a practical shallow water jacket platform in the recent platform design project has been performed using the proposed approach and the results are discussed.


Author(s):  
Johyun Kyoung ◽  
Sagar Samaria ◽  
Jang Whan Kim

Abstract This paper presents a response-based, time-domain structural fatigue analysis of a floating offshore platform. The conventional technique for structural fatigue assessments of offshore platforms uses a linear, frequency-domain analysis based on the spectral method. Although this conventional method is computationally efficient, there is a room for improving accuracy and reducing uncertainties because it cannot accurately address non-linear loadings on the offshore platform. Such non-linear loads arise from the wave, wind, and current as well as from the riser and mooring systems; these non-linearities necessitate large factors of safety that lead to conservative design and frequent inspection. As an extension of previous work (Kyoung et al.[12]), this study presents the development of a time-domain, structural fatigue analysis that explicitly addresses non-linear loading on the platform. The external load time-histories are directly mapped onto the structure at every time interval to create a stress-based response with the varying environment. In each time step, the load mapping accurately captures the phase relationship between the external loading and hull inertial response. Therefore, present method reduces uncertainties in the fatigue damage computation and overcomes the assumptions of spectral method. Present load component-based approach is applied onto a finite element structural model, which provides unit structural response at locations of interest. Time history of structural response is obtained by synthesizing the obtained unit stress-based structural response with environmental loading and platform motion response. Fatigue damage can be computed from the obtained time series of structural response using rain-flow counting. As an application, a conventional semisubmersible platform is used to evaluate structural fatigue damage for a given wave scatter diagram. A comparison between results from this response-based time-domain approach and the conventional spectral method is presented.


1986 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hari B. Kanegaonkar ◽  
Achintya Haldar ◽  
C.K. Ramesh

1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 313-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf Skjong ◽  
Henrik O. Madsen

2010 ◽  
Vol 107 (9) ◽  
pp. 369-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Gaier ◽  
B. Unger ◽  
H. Dannbauer

2011 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 152-160
Author(s):  
A. Souf A. Souf ◽  
◽  
K. Talea K. Talea ◽  
A. Bakali A. Bakali ◽  
M. Talea M. Talea ◽  
...  

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