A Numerical Study on Smoke Behavior of Fishing Vessel Engine Room

Author(s):  
Ho-Sung JANG ◽  
◽  
Sang-Won JI
Author(s):  
Yee Seok Bae ◽  
Geun Jong Yoo ◽  
Hoon Ki Choi

In engine room, proper enclosure system is preferable for reducing noise level but the enclosure system in the engine room causes bad influence on cooling performance due to poor ventilation. Cooling efficiency of the enclosure system can be improved by varying fan speed and proper flow path for ventilation. In this study, numerical analysis is performed to assess cooling effect of the enclosure system using finite volume method. The RNG k-ε model is adopted for turbulence model along with heat exchanger model and porous media model for heat exchanger analysis, and moving reference frame model for rotational fan. Cold flow analysis result shows reasonable agreement with experimental data. Analysis results show direct effect of velocity and temperature distribution on cooling ability in the enclosure system. Comparing with analysis result for the engine room which has no enclosure system, the case of total enclosure system which has box hole flow path shows the reasonable cooling capacity with noise reduction effect.


Author(s):  
Hyung Rak Kim ◽  
Young Min Seo ◽  
Man Yeong Ha ◽  
Jae Seok Lee ◽  
Pan Young Kim

Author(s):  
Isar Ghamari ◽  
Odd M. Faltinsen ◽  
Marilena Greco ◽  
Claudio Lugni

Parametric resonance (PR) in roll is of concern for fishing vessels, especially in head-sea waves. Here the effect of passive anti-roll free-surface tank is investigated experimentally and numerically on realistic fishing-vessel geometry at zero forward speed. On the numerical side, the onboard tank is simulated using an open source computational fluid dynamic (CFD) development platform, OpenFOAM (Open Field Operation and Manipulation). The internal flow solver is coupled with the seakeeping solver, which is based on the weakly nonlinear method proposed in [1]. Experimentally, two different relevant scenarios were examined: 1) a 2D rectangular tank with shallow-water filling depth was forced to oscillate in roll and the loads induced on the tank were measured; 2) a fishing vessel was tested in a towing tank, prescribing regular head-sea waves. The vessel was examined both without and with anti-roll tanks and a mooring-line system was designed so to control the horizontal motions with limited effect on the parametric occurrence. The experiments on the fishing vessel are considered to assess the seakeeping solver. Both model tests and numerical results confirmed the effectiveness of an on-board tank in avoiding PR. For the examined cases with tank, the parametric resonance did not occur without forcing an initial roll. Moreover, the initial roll amplitude and roll phase relative to the heave motion matter for triggering the instability.


Author(s):  
Marilena Greco ◽  
Claudio Lugni

Present research activity examines numerically the occurrence of parametric roll on a fishing vessel interacting with regular head-sea waves. The adopted solver is an efficient 3-D numerical Domain-Decomposition strategy for the seakeeping of a 6-dof vessel without and with small forward speed and possibly subjected to bottom-slamming and water-on-deck events. Here, the vessel has been assumed at rest and the excitation frequency is varied in the first parametric resonance zone and occurrence and features of the instability are examined in terms of nonlinearities of the incident waves and roll natural-to-incident wave frequency ratio. The analysis is performed both fully within the potential-flow theory and examining the effect on the parametric resonance of the viscous correction to the roll damping obtained from free-decay 3D model tests on the same ship. A system of four cables, horizontal in the mean configuration, will be used experimentally to limit the horizontal vessel motions. Here the numerical solver is used to analyze the influence of cable stiffness and of cable configuration on the vessel behavior and to help the design of the physical set up. The vessel has deep draft and high mean freeboard, these aspects work against the occurrence of bottom slamming and water-on-deck events. Without forward speed, no bottom slamming phenomena were observed while limited number of water-on-deck events with small amount of shipped liquid was recorded for the highest-frequency incident waves with largest steepnesses, among those causing parametric roll.


Author(s):  
Pan Young Kim ◽  
Jae Seok Lee ◽  
Hyung Rak Kim ◽  
Man Yeong Ha ◽  
Young Min Seo

1998 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 473-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sampoli, P. Benassi, R. Dell'Anna,

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document