Knowledge

Keyword: renewable energy

report

Offshore Logistic Hubs

Spaniol, Matt

This report provides a summary on the prospects for developing offshore logistics hubs and their evaluation as opportunities for the maritime and offshore industries. The report’s findings are based on respondents’ answers to surveys and focuses on when offshore logistic hubs will come into operation and their business potential. The data for this report is based on desk research and an analysis of survey responses. The report is produced by the PERISCOPE network.

Periscope Report / 2020
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report

Offshore Energy Hubs

Spaniol, Matt

This report provides an assessment on the prospects for offshore energy hubs. Four use cases have been developed and evaluated by respondents in a survey instrument for their forecasted time horizon to implementation and their business potential as opportunities for the maritime and offshore
industries. The report is produced by the PERISCOPE Group at Aarhus University for the PERISCOPE network.

Periscope Report / 2020
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paper

Reduced environmental impact of marine transport through speed reduction and wind assisted propulsion

Tillig, Fabian; Ringsberg, Jonas W.; Psaraftis, Harilaos N.; Zis, Thalis

To achieve IMO’s goal of a 50% reduction of GHG emission by 2050 (compared to the 2008 levels), shipping must not only work towards an optimization of each ship and its components but aim for an optimization of the complete marine transport system, including fleet planning, harbour logistics, route planning, speed profiles, weather routing and ship design. ShipCLEAN, a newly developed model, introduces a coupling of a marine transport economics model to a sophisticated ship energy systems model – it provides a leap towards a holistic optimization of marine transport systems. This paper presents how the model is applied to propose a reduction in fuel consumption and environmental impact by speed reduction of a container ship on a Pacific Ocean trade and the implementation of wind assisted propulsion on a MR Tanker on a North Atlantic trade. The main conclusions show that an increase of the fuel price, for example by applying a bunker levy, will lead to considerable, economically motivated speed reductions in liner traffic. The case study sowed possible yearly fuel savings of almost 21 300 t if the fuel price would be increased from 300 to 1000 USD/t. Accordingly, higher fuel prices can motivate the installation of wind assisted propulsion, which potentially saves up to 500 t of fuel per year for the investigated MR Tanker on a transatlantic route.

Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment Volume 83 / 2020
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book

Floating Power Plant hybrid wind-wave platform: CFD simulations of the influence of chamber geometry

Miguel Anton Aguilar, Claes Eskilsson, Jacob Andersen, Morten Bech Kramer & Sarah Thomas

Floating Power Plant (FPP) develops a hybrid floating wind and wave energy device. Pitching Wave Energy Converters (WECs) interact with the supporting structure, amplifying the motion of the WECs within the design wave frequency range. In this work we focus on the effect of the chamber geometry – without the WEC – in amplifying the waves inside the chamber. The simulations are carried out using two-phase Navier-Stokes simulations. We investigate the wave propagation and the interaction between waves and the fixed support structure. The simulations are compared to experimental tests performed in the wave basin at Aalborg University.

CRC Press / 2020
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book

Plans for wave basin tests of the Floating Power Plant P80 device under the OESA project and the EUDP O&G project

Morten Bech Kramer, Jacob Andersen, Nis Frededal Ebsen & Sarah Thomas

Floating Power Plant is, together with several partners, preparing to design, build and test a scaled version of the complete so-called P80 device. The scaled model is to be tested in AAU's wave basin, SSPA's facilities, followed by at least one external facility. The model will be tested in combinations of wave, wind and current conditions with a view to validating the numerical models and to further develop the understanding of the interactions within the device. The purpose of this document is to gather information that is relevant to designing and building the physically scaled model, and to designing and executing the test campaign.

Department of the Built Environment, Aalborg University / 2020
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paper

Wave Load Mitigation by Perforation of Monopiles

Jacob Andersen, Rune Abrahamsen, Thomas Lykke Andersen, Morten Thøtt Andersen, Torben Ladegaard Baun & Jesper Lykkegaard Neubauer

The design of large diameter monopiles (8–10 m) at intermediate to deep waters is largely driven by the fatigue limit state and mainly due to wave loads. The scope of the present paper is to assess the mitigation of wave loads on a monopile by perforation of the shell. The perforation design consists of elliptical holes in the vicinity of the splash zone. Wave loads are estimated for both regular and irregular waves through physical model tests in a wave flume. The test matrix includes waves with Keulegan–Carpenter (KC) numbers in the range 0.25 to 10 and covers both fatigue and ultimate limit states. Load reductions in the order of 6%–20% are found for KC numbers above 1.5. Significantly higher load reductions are found for KC numbers less than 1.5 and thus the potential to reduce fatigue wave loads has been demonstrated.

Journal of Marine Science and Engineering / 2020
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report

Microgrids at Large Ports

Spaniol, Matt

This report provides an assessment on the prospects for the microgrids at large ports. A survey has been developed to this end and has been evaluated by respondents to crowdsource a forecasted time horizon to implementation and its potential as an opportunity for the maritime and offshore industries. The report is produced by the PERISCOPE Group at Aarhus University for the PERISCOPE network.

Periscope Report / 2020
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paper

A spectral/hp element depth-integrated model for nonlinear wave-body interaction

Umberto Bosi, Allan P. Engsig-Karup, Claes Eskilsson & Mario Ricchiuto

We present a depth-integrated Boussinesq model for the efficient simulation of nonlinear wave–body interaction. The model exploits a ‘unified’ Boussinesq framework, i.e. the fluid under the body is also treated with the depth-integrated approach. The unified Boussinesq approach was initially proposed by Jiang (2001) and recently analyzed by Lannes (2017). The choice of Boussinesq-type equations removes the vertical dimension of the problem, resulting in a wave–body model with adequate precision for weakly nonlinear and dispersive waves expressed in horizontal dimensions only. The framework involves the coupling of two different domains with different flow characteristics. Inside each domain, the continuous spectral/hp element method is used to solve the appropriate flow model since it allows to achieve high-order, possibly exponential, convergence for non-breaking waves. Flux-based conditions for the domain coupling are used, following the recipes provided by the discontinuous Galerkin framework. The main contribution of this work is the inclusion of floating surface-piercing bodies in the conventional depth-integrated Boussinesq framework and the use of a spectral/hp element method for high-order accurate numerical discretization in space. The model is verified using manufactured solutions and validated against published results for wave–body interaction. The model is shown to have excellent accuracy and is relevant for applications of waves interacting with wave energy devices.

Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering / 2019
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paper

Influence of floater geometry on snap loads in mooring systems for wave energy converters

Johannes Palm & Claes Eskilsson

Mooring systems for floating wave energy converters often rely on floaters to allow for minimum restraints of the body motion in heavy. However, the inclusion of floaters also introduce possible slack-taut scenarios induced by the dynamic response of the floater in relation to the fair-lead point of the mooring. This can increase the occurrence of snap loads. The present study outlines the work to include floaters and sinks into a high-order discontinuous Galerkin model for mooring cable dynamics. Numerical simulations of a mooring leg adapted from the Waves4Power full-scale device are performed, and the results from varying the floater geometry are analyzed.

For this case the floater influence on the occurrence of snap loads was clearly evident. There is a strong correlation between floater pitch response and cable slack in the upper mooring cable. For a floater with constant buoyancy, increasing the floater height and thereby increasing the pitch inertia of the floater is shown to decrease the range of frequencies where cable slack occurs. It is illustrated that for some cases, changing floater geometry can avoid slack altogether. A careful design of the floater geometry can thus make a large difference for the dynamic load factor of the mooring system.

European Tidal and Wave Energy Conference / 2019
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paper

Optimizing vessel fleet size and mix to support maintenance operations at offshore wind farms

Stålhane, Magnus; Halvorsen-Weare, Elin Espeland; Nonås, Lars Magne; Pantuso, Giovanni

This paper considers the problem of determining the optimal vessel fleet to support maintenance operations at an offshore wind farm. We propose a two-stage stochastic programming (SP) model of the problem where the first stage decisions are what vessels to charter. The second stage decisions are how to support maintenance tasks using the chartered vessels from the first stage, given uncertainty in weather conditions and the occurrence of failures. To solve the resulting SP model we perform an ad-hoc Dantzig–Wolfe decomposition where, unlike standard decomposition approaches for SP models, parts of the second stage problem remain in the master problem. The decomposed model is then solved as a matheuristic by apriori generating a subset of the possible extreme points from the Dantzig–Wolfe subproblems. A computational study in three parts is presented. First, we verify the underlying mathematical model by comparing results to leading work from the literature. Then, results from in-sample and out-of-sample stability tests are presented to verify that the matheuristic gives stable results. Finally, we exemplify how the model can help offshore wind farm operators and vessel developers improve their decision making processes.

European Journal of Operational Research, Volume 276, Issue 2 / 2019
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