Hydrologic riverbed generation and operational analysis for autonomous vessels in meandering inland waterways
Paper in proceeding, 2025

Confined water significantly impacts autonomous vessel navigation. This study introduces a novel method for rapidly generating inland waterway scenarios to validate vessel performance in dynamic confined conditions. A new formula models river hydraulics, incorporating crosssectional shifts, current fields, deposition, and erosion effects. Validated with U.S. River field data, the formula captures the lateral migration of the thalweg in bends. The hydraulic model was incorporated into a novel voyage planning simulation platform for operational analysis. The ship path following simulations reveal the profound influence of hydrodynamic effects on steering, highlighting the need to integrate bathymetric and current data into control systems to enhance navigational safety for autonomous vessels in confined waterways.

control

Autonomous vessels

river hydraulics

inland waterways

Author

Chengqian Zhang

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Jonas Ringsberg

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Fabian Thies

FRIENDSHIP SYSTEMS AG

Proceedings of the International Offshore and Polar Engineering Conference

10986189 (ISSN) 15551792 (eISSN)

3100-3107 ISOPE-25-442
978-1-880653-74-6 (ISBN)

The 35th International Ocean and Polar Engineering Conference (ISOPE 2025)
Seoul, South Korea,

AUTOBarge - European training and research network on Autonomous Barges for Smart Inland Shipping

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/955768), 2021-10-01 -- 2025-09-30.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Transport

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Fluid Mechanics

Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology

Vehicle and Aerospace Engineering

Control Engineering

Roots

Basic sciences

More information

Latest update

9/1/2025 2