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Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis

[page 119, 132 missing] In recent years much interest has been shown iri the design of offshore structures. Flexible members such as marine risers and mooring cables are critical components in such structures. These systems are characterised by nonlinear geometry and loading. In the formulation of a...

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Main Author: Phaal, Robert
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Not Specified 2024
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author Phaal, Robert
author_browse Phaal, Robert
author_facet Phaal, Robert
author_sort Phaal, Robert
collection Thesis
description [page 119, 132 missing] In recent years much interest has been shown iri the design of offshore structures. Flexible members such as marine risers and mooring cables are critical components in such structures. These systems are characterised by nonlinear geometry and loading. In the formulation of an algorithm to model such systems, simplifying assumptions must often be made. This thesis attempts firstly to give an overview of the literature available in this field. The testing of a riser model is important to ensure that it may be used with confidence. There are several sources of error inherent in a model of this nature. Modelling errors are those caused by the simplifying assumptions made in developing the mathematical statement of the model. Numerical errors include those due to the approximation method and the finite accuracy of the computing machine. Finally, there is a level of randomness in the design parameters, which results in a lack of confidence and an uncertainty in the response obtained from a deterministic model. This thesis attempts to qualify, if not quantify, the sources of error innate to the modelling of flexible offshore structures; in particular, marine risers. Extensive use has been made of a sophisticated, commercially available finite element program, ABAQUS. Three commonly occuring riser configurations have been modelled successfully with ABAQUS. These are the standard, the catenary, and the hanging riser configurations (see figure 1.1). A geometrically linearised finite element riser model has also been developed and tested. The linearised model is shown to be applicable to problems where the maximum model deflection is less than approximately 10% of the riser length. A Probabilistic Finite Element Method (PFEM) has been implemented in order to investigate one source of uncertainty in the problem: that of the hydrodynamic loading. The method is shown to have limitations expressed by coefficient of variation bounds for the random parameters. The C data available in the literature is within these bounds, d while the C data is not. These bounds are shown to be a problem dependent, and the PFEM to be more applicable to the modeiling of the uncertainties associated with the analysis of drag dominated problems such as mooring cables.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40471 Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis Phaal, Robert Science [page 119, 132 missing] In recent years much interest has been shown iri the design of offshore structures. Flexible members such as marine risers and mooring cables are critical components in such structures. These systems are characterised by nonlinear geometry and loading. In the formulation of an algorithm to model such systems, simplifying assumptions must often be made. This thesis attempts firstly to give an overview of the literature available in this field. The testing of a riser model is important to ensure that it may be used with confidence. There are several sources of error inherent in a model of this nature. Modelling errors are those caused by the simplifying assumptions made in developing the mathematical statement of the model. Numerical errors include those due to the approximation method and the finite accuracy of the computing machine. Finally, there is a level of randomness in the design parameters, which results in a lack of confidence and an uncertainty in the response obtained from a deterministic model. This thesis attempts to qualify, if not quantify, the sources of error innate to the modelling of flexible offshore structures; in particular, marine risers. Extensive use has been made of a sophisticated, commercially available finite element program, ABAQUS. Three commonly occuring riser configurations have been modelled successfully with ABAQUS. These are the standard, the catenary, and the hanging riser configurations (see figure 1.1). A geometrically linearised finite element riser model has also been developed and tested. The linearised model is shown to be applicable to problems where the maximum model deflection is less than approximately 10% of the riser length. A Probabilistic Finite Element Method (PFEM) has been implemented in order to investigate one source of uncertainty in the problem: that of the hydrodynamic loading. The method is shown to have limitations expressed by coefficient of variation bounds for the random parameters. The C data available in the literature is within these bounds, d while the C data is not. These bounds are shown to be a problem dependent, and the PFEM to be more applicable to the modeiling of the uncertainties associated with the analysis of drag dominated problems such as mooring cables. 2024-07-23T13:13:12Z 2024-07-23T13:13:12Z 1987 2024-07-19T13:53:14Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40471 eng application/pdf Not Specified Not Specified
spellingShingle Science
Phaal, Robert
Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
title_full Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
title_fullStr Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
title_full_unstemmed Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
title_short Computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
title_sort computational and modelling aspects of marine riser analysis
topic Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40471
work_keys_str_mv AT phaalrobert computationalandmodellingaspectsofmarineriseranalysis