High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading

The fatigue of ship structural details is of major concern in the maritime industry as it can generate fracture issues that may compromise structural integrity. In the present study, a fatigue analysis of the lower hopper knuckle connection of a bulk carrier was conducted using the Finite Element Me...

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Main Authors: Kapnopoulou, Vaso K., Caridis, Piero
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129154
https://zenodo.org/record/1129154
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.1129154
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institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Lower hopper knuckle
high cycle fatigue
finite element method
dynamic load cases.
spellingShingle Lower hopper knuckle
high cycle fatigue
finite element method
dynamic load cases.
Kapnopoulou, Vaso K.
Caridis, Piero
High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
topic_facet Lower hopper knuckle
high cycle fatigue
finite element method
dynamic load cases.
description The fatigue of ship structural details is of major concern in the maritime industry as it can generate fracture issues that may compromise structural integrity. In the present study, a fatigue analysis of the lower hopper knuckle connection of a bulk carrier was conducted using the Finite Element Method by means of ABAQUS/CAE software. The fatigue life was calculated using Miner's Rule and the long-term distribution of stress range by the use of the two-parameter Weibull distribution. The cumulative damage ratio was estimated using the fatigue damage resulting from the stress range occurring at each load condition. For this purpose, a cargo hold model was first generated, which extends over the length of two holds (the mid-hold and half of each of the adjacent holds) and transversely over the full breadth of the hull girder. Following that, a submodel of the area of interest was extracted in order to calculate the hot spot stress of the connection and to estimate the fatigue life of the structural detail. Two hot spot locations were identified; one at the top layer of the inner bottom plate and one at the top layer of the hopper plate. The IACS Common Structural Rules (CSR) require that specific dynamic load cases for each loading condition are assessed. Following this, the dynamic load case that causes the highest stress range at each loading condition should be used in the fatigue analysis for the calculation of the cumulative fatigue damage ratio. Each load case has a different effect on ship hull response. Of main concern, when assessing the fatigue strength of the lower hopper knuckle connection, was the determination of the maximum, i.e. the critical value of the stress range, which acts in a direction normal to the weld toe line. This acts in the transverse direction, that is, perpendicularly to the ship's centerline axis. The load cases were explored both theoretically and numerically in order to establish the one that causes the highest damage to the location examined. The most severe one was identified to be the load case induced by beam sea condition where the encountered wave comes from the starboard. At the level of the cargo hold model, the model was assumed to be simply supported at its ends. A coarse mesh was generated in order to represent the overall stiffness of the structure. The elements employed were quadrilateral shell elements, each having four integration points. A linear elastic analysis was performed because linear elastic material behavior can be presumed, since only localized yielding is allowed by most design codes. At the submodel level, the displacements of the analysis of the cargo hold model to the outer region nodes of the submodel acted as boundary conditions and applied loading for the submodel. In order to calculate the hot spot stress at the hot spot locations, a very fine mesh zone was generated and used. The fatigue life of the detail was found to be 16.4 years which is lower than the design fatigue life of the structure (25 years), making this location vulnerable to fatigue fracture issues. Moreover, the loading conditions that induce the most damage to the location were found to be the various ballasting conditions. : {"references": ["Pook L., Metal Fatigue; What it is, why it matters, Springer, 2007, ch.1.", "DNV, \"Fatigue Assessment of Ship Structures\", Det Norske Veritas, 2014.", "IACS, Common Structural Rules, \"Technical Background for CSR BC&OT Report List\", International Association of Classification Societies, 2015.", "Fricke, \"Guideline for the Fatigue Assessment by Notch Stress Analysis for Welded Structures\", Annual Assembly of International Institute of Welding, Vol. IIW, 2010.", "Niemi E, Fricke W, Maddox SJ, Designer's guide to the structural hot spot stress approach, 1st ed., Woodhead Publishing, 2006, ch.1.", "Hobbacher A F, \"New Developments at the Recent Update of the IIW Recommendations for Fatigue of Welded Joints and Components\", Steel Construction, Vol.3, 2010, No 4, pp. 231-242.", "Fricke W, Kahl A, \"Fatigue assessment of weld root failure of hollow section joints by structural and notch stress approaches\", Conference: Tubular Structures XI, 2006, London.", "Kim B, Yung-Sup S, Wang X, \"Combination of Long Term Dynamic Loads for Fatigue Assessment\", International Society of Offshore and Polar Engineers, 2006.", "ABS, \"Dynamic Load Approach and Direct Analysis for High Speed Craft\", American Bureau of Shipping, 2003.\n[10]\tABS, \"Dynamic Load Approach for Loading Production, Storage and Offloading (FPSO) Installations\", American Bureau of Shipping, 2014.\n[11]\tIACS Common Structural Rules, \"Common Structural Rules for Bulk Carrier with length 90m and above\", Det Norske Veritas AS, 2012.\n[12]\tLiao P, Quemener Y, Lee C, Chen K, \"Load Uncertainty Effects on the Fatigue Life Evaluation by the Common Structural Rules\", OMAE2015, Proceedings of the ASME 2015 34TH International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering, May 31-June 5, 2015, St. John's Newfoundland, Canada."]}
format Text
author Kapnopoulou, Vaso K.
Caridis, Piero
author_facet Kapnopoulou, Vaso K.
Caridis, Piero
author_sort Kapnopoulou, Vaso K.
title High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
title_short High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
title_full High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
title_fullStr High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
title_full_unstemmed High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading
title_sort high cycle fatigue analysis of a lower hopper knuckle connection of a large bulk carrier under dynamic loading
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129154
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genre Arctic
Newfoundland
genre_facet Arctic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.1129154 2023-05-15T15:20:27+02:00 High Cycle Fatigue Analysis Of A Lower Hopper Knuckle Connection Of A Large Bulk Carrier Under Dynamic Loading Kapnopoulou, Vaso K. Caridis, Piero 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129154 https://zenodo.org/record/1129154 en eng Zenodo https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129155 Open Access Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY Lower hopper knuckle high cycle fatigue finite element method dynamic load cases. Text Journal article article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129154 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129155 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The fatigue of ship structural details is of major concern in the maritime industry as it can generate fracture issues that may compromise structural integrity. In the present study, a fatigue analysis of the lower hopper knuckle connection of a bulk carrier was conducted using the Finite Element Method by means of ABAQUS/CAE software. The fatigue life was calculated using Miner's Rule and the long-term distribution of stress range by the use of the two-parameter Weibull distribution. The cumulative damage ratio was estimated using the fatigue damage resulting from the stress range occurring at each load condition. For this purpose, a cargo hold model was first generated, which extends over the length of two holds (the mid-hold and half of each of the adjacent holds) and transversely over the full breadth of the hull girder. Following that, a submodel of the area of interest was extracted in order to calculate the hot spot stress of the connection and to estimate the fatigue life of the structural detail. Two hot spot locations were identified; one at the top layer of the inner bottom plate and one at the top layer of the hopper plate. The IACS Common Structural Rules (CSR) require that specific dynamic load cases for each loading condition are assessed. Following this, the dynamic load case that causes the highest stress range at each loading condition should be used in the fatigue analysis for the calculation of the cumulative fatigue damage ratio. Each load case has a different effect on ship hull response. Of main concern, when assessing the fatigue strength of the lower hopper knuckle connection, was the determination of the maximum, i.e. the critical value of the stress range, which acts in a direction normal to the weld toe line. This acts in the transverse direction, that is, perpendicularly to the ship's centerline axis. The load cases were explored both theoretically and numerically in order to establish the one that causes the highest damage to the location examined. The most severe one was identified to be the load case induced by beam sea condition where the encountered wave comes from the starboard. At the level of the cargo hold model, the model was assumed to be simply supported at its ends. A coarse mesh was generated in order to represent the overall stiffness of the structure. The elements employed were quadrilateral shell elements, each having four integration points. A linear elastic analysis was performed because linear elastic material behavior can be presumed, since only localized yielding is allowed by most design codes. At the submodel level, the displacements of the analysis of the cargo hold model to the outer region nodes of the submodel acted as boundary conditions and applied loading for the submodel. In order to calculate the hot spot stress at the hot spot locations, a very fine mesh zone was generated and used. The fatigue life of the detail was found to be 16.4 years which is lower than the design fatigue life of the structure (25 years), making this location vulnerable to fatigue fracture issues. Moreover, the loading conditions that induce the most damage to the location were found to be the various ballasting conditions. : {"references": ["Pook L., Metal Fatigue; What it is, why it matters, Springer, 2007, ch.1.", "DNV, \"Fatigue Assessment of Ship Structures\", Det Norske Veritas, 2014.", "IACS, Common Structural Rules, \"Technical Background for CSR BC&OT Report List\", International Association of Classification Societies, 2015.", "Fricke, \"Guideline for the Fatigue Assessment by Notch Stress Analysis for Welded Structures\", Annual Assembly of International Institute of Welding, Vol. IIW, 2010.", "Niemi E, Fricke W, Maddox SJ, Designer's guide to the structural hot spot stress approach, 1st ed., Woodhead Publishing, 2006, ch.1.", "Hobbacher A F, \"New Developments at the Recent Update of the IIW Recommendations for Fatigue of Welded Joints and Components\", Steel Construction, Vol.3, 2010, No 4, pp. 231-242.", "Fricke W, Kahl A, \"Fatigue assessment of weld root failure of hollow section joints by structural and notch stress approaches\", Conference: Tubular Structures XI, 2006, London.", "Kim B, Yung-Sup S, Wang X, \"Combination of Long Term Dynamic Loads for Fatigue Assessment\", International Society of Offshore and Polar Engineers, 2006.", "ABS, \"Dynamic Load Approach and Direct Analysis for High Speed Craft\", American Bureau of Shipping, 2003.\n[10]\tABS, \"Dynamic Load Approach for Loading Production, Storage and Offloading (FPSO) Installations\", American Bureau of Shipping, 2014.\n[11]\tIACS Common Structural Rules, \"Common Structural Rules for Bulk Carrier with length 90m and above\", Det Norske Veritas AS, 2012.\n[12]\tLiao P, Quemener Y, Lee C, Chen K, \"Load Uncertainty Effects on the Fatigue Life Evaluation by the Common Structural Rules\", OMAE2015, Proceedings of the ASME 2015 34TH International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering, May 31-June 5, 2015, St. John's Newfoundland, Canada."]} Text Arctic Newfoundland DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Canada Niemi ENVELOPE(24.516,24.516,66.701,66.701)