Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5474473 | Ocean Engineering | 2017 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Recent research has confirmed a new type of vortex-induced vibration (VIV) in steel catenary risers (SCRs), purely caused by vessel motion. Vessel motion-induced VIV occurs because the SCR is exposed to the equivalent oscillating current due to its own motions relative to the still water. Preliminary results indicate that vessel motion-induced VIV is quite different from ocean current-induced VIV and is characterized with distinct time-varying features. In the present study, we aim at further summarizing the dominant parameters that govern the general vessel motion-induced VIV responses. Throughout the comparative studies on the instantaneous and statistical VIV responses including strain, displacement, response frequency, fatigue damage and top tension variation, the maximum Keulegan-Carpenter number KCmax and the maximum equivalent current velocity Vn_max are found to be the two dominant parameters that govern the vessel motion-induced VIV responses. Generally speaking, when KCmax is sufficiently large (larger than 39 according to the present study), the general vessel motion-induced VIV response is dominated by Vn_max. However, when KCmax is small, the VIV response is less time-varying and shows strong correlation with both KCmax and the local KC number distribution along the SCR. Vessel motion-induced VIV response frequency models are also reviewed and discussed considering different KCmax and Vn_max ranges. Hopefully, these results can provide some general guidelines for future vessel motion-induced VIV prediction and for industrial references.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Ocean Engineering
Authors
Jungao Wang, Shixiao Fu, Carl Martin Larsen, Rolf Baarholm, Jie Wu, Halvor Lie,