Abstract

It is essential to design a reasonable mooring line length that ensures quasi-static responses of moored floating structures are within an acceptable level, and that reduces the cost of mooring lines in the overall project. Quasi-static responses include the equilibrium position and the line tension of a moored floating structure (also called the mean value in a dynamic response), etc. The quasi-static responses derived by the classic catenary equation cannot present mooring–seabed interaction and hydrodynamic effects on a mooring line. While a commercial program can predict reasonable quasi-static responses, costly modeling is required. This motivated us to propose a new method for predicting quasi-static responses that minimizes the mechanical energy of the whole system based on basic geometric parameters, and that is easy to implement. In this study, the mechanical energy of moored floating structures is assumed to be the sum of gravitational–buoyancy potential energy, kinetic energy induced by drag forces, and spring potential energy derived by line tension. We introduce fundamental theoretical background for the development of the proposed method. We investigate the effect of quasi-static actions on mooring response, comparing the proposed method’s results with those from the catenary equation and ABAQUS software. The study reveals the shortcomings of the catenary equation in offshore applications. We also compare quasi-static responses derived by the AQWA numerical package with the results calculated from the proposed method for an 8 MW WindFloat 2 type of platform. Good agreement was drawn between the proposed method and AQWA. The proposed method proves more timesaving than AQWA in terms of modeling of mooring lines and floaters, and more accurate than the catenary equation, and can be used effectively in the early design phase of dimension mooring lengths for moored floating structures.

Highlights

  • Fossil fuels on land can no longer meet the demands from industrial activities, so the focus has shifted to oil/gas reserves from the deep and ultra-deep sea

  • The fact is that the Catenary equation provides a computationally efficient formulation to predict the quasi-static response of a mooring line

  • Mechanical energy was assumed to be the sum of gravitational–buoyancy potential energy, kinetic energy induced by drag forces, and spring potential energy derived by line tension

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Summary

Introduction

Fossil fuels on land can no longer meet the demands from industrial activities, so the focus has shifted to oil/gas reserves from the deep and ultra-deep sea. It is essential to calculate a reasonable mooring line length that ensures that quasi-static responses of moored floating structures are within an acceptable level in order to reduce the project cost without affecting performance. Applied the classic catenary equation to investigate geometric parameters on the quasi-static response of a mooring line that was installed in a wave energy converter. Bhinder et al [15] investigated the effect of the mooring configuration on the response of a wave energy converter using different numerical packages, including AQWA. Murphy et al [17] examined the quasi-static performance from mooring systems of wave energy converters in varying tidal ranges using AQWA suites. The proposed method was validated with two cases (a suspended mooring line and the WindFloat 2 type of floating platform), comparing the Catenary equation, ABAQUS software, and AQWA suites

Theoretical Backgrounds of the Proposed Method
Moored Floating Structure Architecture
Mechanical
Minimization of Mechanical Energy
Validation and Case Studies
The Suspended Mooring Line
The WindFloat 2 Floating Platform
Properties
Conclusions

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