Open Access
Structural Design Of Ultra Large Ships Based On Direct Calculation Approach
Author(s) -
Nikola Vladimir,
Ivo Senjanović,
Šime Malenica,
Jérôme de Lauzon,
Hong-Il Im,
Byoungdeog Choi,
DaeSeung Cho
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
pomorski zbornik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1848-9052
pISSN - 0554-6397
DOI - 10.18048/2016.00.63
Subject(s) - springing , context (archaeology) , shipyard , container (type theory) , naval architecture , shipbuilding , marine engineering , hull , modal , finite element method , seakeeping , computer science , engineering , operations research , structural engineering , mechanical engineering , geology , geography , paleontology , chemistry , archaeology , polymer chemistry
The trend in modern sea transportation is building of ever larger ships, which require application of different direct calculation methodologies and numerical tools to achieve their reliable structural design. This is particularly emphasized in case of ultra large container ships (ULCS), but also other ship types like bulk carriers or large LNG ships belong to this category. In this context some classification societies have developed guidelines for performing direct calculations and for that purpose there are several hydro-structure tools available around the world, mainly relying on the same theoretical assumptions, but having incorporated different numerical procedures. Such tools are mostly based on the application of the 3D potential flow theoretical models coupled with the 3D FEM structural models. This paper illustrates application of general hydro-structure tool HOMER (BV) in the assessment of ship structural response in waves. An outline of the numerical procedure based on the modal approach is given together with basic software description. Application case is 19000 TEU ULCS built in South Korean shipyard Hyundai Heavy Industries. Extensive hydroelastic analyses of the ship are performed, and here some representative results for fatigue response with linear springing influence are listed.