Subsurface ice transport at a transversally towed ship model

The subsurface transport of ice along the underwater body of a ship hull or a structure may cause damages to appendages. In order to investigate the conditions under which the ice accumulation occurs, a series of model tests was carried out in the ice basin of Aalto University. The used ship model w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Volume 8: Polar and Arctic Sciences and Technology; Petroleum Technology
Main Authors: Zhou, Li, Bock und Polach, RĂ¼diger Ulrich Franz von, Bai, Xu
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11420/3879
Description
Summary:The subsurface transport of ice along the underwater body of a ship hull or a structure may cause damages to appendages. In order to investigate the conditions under which the ice accumulation occurs, a series of model tests was carried out in the ice basin of Aalto University. The used ship model was towed laterally against the ice with one side breaking level ice. The transport of broken ice floes broken off from the intact ice sheet has been has been monitored with underwater cameras. Both the model drift speed, respectively the ice drift speed, and the ice thickness are found to affect ice accumulation process. The Densimetric Froude number is introduced as measured to determine whether ice floes will accumulate on the upstream of the hull. It is found that ice accumulation is triggered at relatively low Froude number.