What is the potential of using ship fatigue routing in terms of fatigue life extension?
Paper in proceeding, 2012

Fatigue damage accumulation in ship structures is a continuous random process, which together with several sources of uncertainties in the fatigue analysis make the fatigue life prediction complex and difficult. It may be a plausible explanation to why fatigue cracks are found earlier than expected in many ocean-crossing vessels. The existence of fatigue cracks brings great challenges to the safety of ship structures, maintenance issues and costs. Various means should therefore be implemented to extend ships’ fatigue service life, for example, decrease cargo loadings and reduce ship speeds. Another alternative is to employ a ship routing design which can reduce/minimize the fatigue damage accumulation, denoted as ship fatigue routing here. This investigation presents a ship fatigue routing procedure, using a simple spectral method developed by the authors, and the analysis of long-term fatigue assessment of a typical container vessel. The potential benefits of using the proposed ship fatigue routing procedure is demonstrated by a case study of a 2,800TEU container ship, using data from full-scale measurements, hindcast data and numerical analysis. It is found that, at least for the current vessel, the fatigue life can be extended by at least 50% by choosing more well-suited “optimum” ship routings.

hindcast wave data

full-scale measurements

ship routing

wave environments

fatigue damage

Author

Wengang Mao

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Division of Marine Design

Jonas Ringsberg

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Division of Marine Design

Igor Rychlik

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Mathematical Statistics

University of Gothenburg

Proceedings of the International Offshore and Polar Engineering Conference

10986189 (ISSN) 15551792 (eISSN)

Vol. 4 4 681-687
9781880653944 (ISBN)

The 22nd International Offshore and Polar Engineering Conference (ISOPE 2012)
Rhodes, Greece,

Chalmers Area of Advance Transport – funding 2012

Chalmers, 2012-01-01 -- 2012-12-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Transport

Roots

Basic sciences

Subject Categories

Reliability and Maintenance

Other Materials Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

Probability Theory and Statistics

More information

Latest update

8/29/2023