Abstract

Different from the traditional marine riser, the vertical lifting pipeline in the deep-sea mining system can be regarded as a free-hanging flexible riser with an unconstrained bottom end. Likewise, problems in terms of vortex-induced vibration (VIV) and flexible deformations can arise during operation. This paper presents experimental tests on a segmented free-hanging marine riser used for deep-sea mining, focusing on the vortex-induced vibration. The riser was formed by connecting pipe sections using flanges, with the top fixed and a lumped mass block added at the bottom to simulate the lifting pump and buffer station, resulting in weakly constrained boundary conditions. By employing the modal superposition principle and the wavelet time-frequency method, we comprehensively investigated the response characteristics of the typical pipe sections and the coupled oscillation of the riser's vibration modes. During the experiment, two important phenomena that differed from previous VIV tests were observed. Firstly, at low reduced velocities (Ur ≤ 7.77), the dominant frequency no longer conformed to the doubling principle in both directions but remained consistent. Secondly, the weak constraint effect of the concentration of mass at the bottom disrupts the formation of vortex shedding, thereby reducing the bending response of the CF direction of the bottom pipe sections. Meanwhile, the drag force enhances the bending response of the IL direction. Additionally, the middle and bottom pipe sections of the riser exhibited obvious mode competition, with the dominant mode often followed by several subordinate modes with considerable vibration energy.

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