Abstract

Computer simulations were conducted to understand the nonlinear dynamics of the cage array to establish an offshore fish farm capable of surviving the severe conditions. To that end, a large fish farm containing 16 net cages in a 2 × 8 configuration was modeled based on the lumped mass model. This numerical model was verified against the physical model tests regarding a single net cage and a net cage array. In particular, three different equivalent mesh groups were compared to each other to balance the numerical accuracy and the computational efficiency. Then, the candidate equivalent mesh group was used to separately model the rigid and the flexible cage arrays subjected to severe conditions. The results show that most trajectory patterns of mooring lines are not as elliptical as the water particle trajectories. This provides evidence to justify the perturbations about the equilibrium of the mooring grid for the full-scale aquaculture cage array system. Alongside this, flexible cages with lower bending stiffness have greater tension forces on the weather side. The bending stiffness has a predominant effect on the surge motion and is also the leading contributor to the nonlinearity of cage motion. The flexible cage with lower bending stiffness is appropriate for more exposed, open ocean fish farming applications, but the increased mooring tension should be taken into account for future design consideration.

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