A FEM based potential theory approach for optimal ice routing

Shipping in ice covered regions has gained high attention within recent years. Analogous to weather routing, the occurrence of ice in a seaway affects the selection of the optimal route with respect to the travel time or fuel consumption. The shorter, direct path between two points - which may lead...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Volume 8: Polar and Arctic Sciences and Technology; Petroleum Technology
Main Authors: Piehl, Henry, Milaković, Aleksandar-Saša, Ehlers, Sören
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11420/5715
Description
Summary:Shipping in ice covered regions has gained high attention within recent years. Analogous to weather routing, the occurrence of ice in a seaway affects the selection of the optimal route with respect to the travel time or fuel consumption. The shorter, direct path between two points - which may lead through an ice covered area - may require a reduction of speed and an increase in fuel consumption. A longer, indirect route, could be more efficient by avoiding the ice covered region. Certain regions may have to be avoided completely, if the ice thickness exceeds the ice-capability of the ship. The objective of this study is to develop a computational method that combines coastline maps, route cost information (e.g. ice thickness), transport task and ship properties to find the optimal route between port of departure A and port of destination B. The development approach for this tool is to formulate the transport task in form of a potential problem, solve this equation with a finite element method and apply edge detection methods and line integration to determine the optimal route. The functionality of the method is first evaluated with simple test problems and then applied to realistic transport scenarios.