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Articles

Discussion of assumptions behind the external dynamic models in ship collisions and groundings

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Pages 45-62 | Received 28 Sep 2018, Accepted 29 Nov 2018, Published online: 11 Dec 2018
 

ABSTRACT

In the past decades, a prevailing way for the assessment of responses in ship collisions and groundings has been to decouple the problem into two parts: external dynamics and internal mechanics. The external dynamics deals with global motions of the two interacting bodies prior to, during and after the collision. The main outcome of an external dynamics assessment is the energy loss during the collision, which will be dissipated by structural deformations in the assessment of internal mechanics. The decoupled method works well for right-angle collisions in general, but the accuracy can be much less in many scenarios, e.g. skew collisions with small collision angles and collisions with long durations. This is mainly because the assumptions in the decoupled method are violated in the studied cases. This paper reviews the assumptions and simplifications behind the external dynamic models and discusses validity of the assumptions by comparing with coupled simulation results. Decoupled and coupled models in both planar 3DOF and full 6DOF are addressed. Various collision scenarios are studied, including colliding with oblique plates, grounding on a sloping sea floor, crushing into rigid plates with normal vectors misaligned with coordinate axes, and collision with a submersible platform. In some scenarios, cases with different attack angles and impact velocities are simulated. The outcome will help understand potential limitations of the decoupled method, which should be used with care.

Acknowledgments

This support is gratefully acknowledged by the authors.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work has been funded by the Research Council of Norway (NFR) through the Centers of Excellence funding scheme, project AMOS (grant number 223254) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

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