Title
Grounding damage estimate through acceleration measurements
Author
Haag, S.R.
Hoogeland, M.G.
Vredeveldt, A.W.
Publication year
2017
Abstract
Instantaneous insight into the structural damage sustained by a ship running aground, can be of great aid in the decision making following such a disaster. It should be possible to distil the extent of structural damage from acceleration measurement data of the entire vessel. Such measurements could possibly even be done using a simple smartphone. This paper describes experimental research exploring the detection of plate rupture in a raking damage scenario by merely looking at acceleration measurement data. Drop tower experiments were performed, which reflect a realistic raking damage scenario and also aim to gain better understanding of both friction and failure in such a scenario. In total four drop tests were performed. Ductile fracture occurred without precedence of necking. A calibration method for a failure criterion, using only one single strain-state, was successfully applied. Separate friction tests showed that static Coulomb friction seems to be a proper model to be applied for the energy dissipation through friction. Moreover, the transition to plate rupture can readily be detected from the experimental acceleration data. When accurate calibration of both the failure and the friction is performed, it is envisaged that the extent of raking damage can indeed be derived through real time acceleration measurements on board of a vessel.
Subject
2015 Fluid & Solid Mechanics
SD - Structural Dynamics
TS - Technical Sciences
Maritime & Offshore
Marine
Energy
Ship grounding
Structural damage
Acceleration measurements
Plate failure
Friction
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:853d82bc-a465-44e4-9227-cceb2c0fab1b
TNO identifier
772444
Source
Proceedings of the ASME 2017 36th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering, OMAE 2017,June 25-30, 2017, Trondheim, Norway, 1-10
Article number
OMAE2017-61732
Document type
conference paper