The invention is generally related to floating offshore structures and more particularly to cylindrical hulls.
The offshore oil and gas industry utilizes various forms of floating systems to provide “platforms” from which to drill for and produce hydrocarbons in water depths for which fixed platforms, jack-up rigs, and other bottom-founded systems are comparatively less economical or not technically feasible. The most common floating systems used for these purposes are Spar Platforms (Spars), Tension Leg Platforms (TLPs), Semi-Submersible Platforms (Semis), and traditional ship forms (Ships). All of these systems use some form of stiffened plate construction to create their hulls. The present invention generally applies to those systems, or portions of those systems, in which the stiffened plate section is cylindrical, in the broad sense of the term. Additional aspects of the invention apply particularly to cylindrical hulls that are circular in cross section. Circular cylindrical hulls are most commonly characteristic of Spars, Mono-column TLPs, and legs (columns) of Semis.
In the prior art, the structural arrangements and methods of assembly are based on ship design practices developed over many years. In these systems, the shell plate or structural skin is first stiffened in the longitudinal direction of the cylinder, usually with structural angles or bulb tees. This plate, stiffened in one direction, is then formed into a full cylinder or a section of a cylinder with these stiffeners parallel to the centerline of the cylinder. Whether the form is curved or flat-sided, the shape of the cylinder is locked in place using girders or frames oriented transversely to these longitudinal stiffeners. These frames are located at relatively uniform intervals in order to limit the spans of the stiffeners to acceptable distances. The spans of these girders and frames themselves may be shortened using intermediate supports, as determined by the designer, in order to optimize the design by choosing to fabricate the extra supports instead of fabricating larger girders for longer spans.
The spacing of the longitudinal stiffeners is based on 1) a minimum distance required for access between the stiffeners for welding to the shell plate (approximately 22 to 26 inches) and 2) a balance between shell plate thickness and stiffener spacing for the plate-buckling checks. The frames or girders transverse to the stiffeners are spaced at least four feet apart for in-service inspection access and up to eight feet depending upon how the design engineer elects to balance the stiffener sizing with the girder spacing.
Like all floating systems, cylindrical hulls are divided into watertight compartments in order to accommodate specified amounts of damage (flooding) without sinking or capsizing. With the exception of a specialized version of the Spar concept that uses a grouping of smaller diameter, circular cylinders to create much of its compartmentation, the sections of the cylindrical hulls are divided into compartments by watertight flats and bulkheads. These terms may have somewhat different meanings in Spar hulls since these hulls have cylinders that float vertically in service compared to ship hulls that float horizontally. In Spars, TLPs, and other deep-draft columned hulls, the flats are perpendicular to the longitudinal stiffeners and the bulkheads are parallel to these stiffeners, while in ships they are the opposite. The descriptions herein will use the terms as applied to Spars and other vessels with vertically oriented cylindrical sections.
Carried over from ship design practices of the prior art, the longitudinal stiffeners are made structurally continuous through, or across, the flats so the stiffeners can be considered to act together structurally with the shell plate when computing the total bending capacity for the cylinder. This is accomplished either by making the stiffeners pass continuously through the flats or by stopping the stiffeners short of the flats and adding brackets on either side that replace the structural continuity that was lost in stopping the stiffeners. When the stiffeners pass through a flat, the holes in the flat have to be closed up to maintain the flat's watertight integrity. When the stiffeners do not pass through the flat, a great number of relatively large brackets must be added and these brackets must align axially across the flat. Both approaches are very labor intensive and thus very costly.
In ships, where the design is largely controlled by loadings from longitudinal bending rather than from hydrostatics, this continuity of the stiffeners over the length of the shell plate is structurally warranted. In 1) vertically oriented, single cylinder hulls, 2) in multi-leg TLPs and 3) Semis with horizontal pontoons submerged quite deep compared to ship drafts, loadings from hydrostatics, instead of loading from longitudinal bending, control much of the sizing of the hull structure. For these floating systems, the structural continuity of the stiffeners, which is so valuable in ship design, is not particularly valuable in non-ship-type hulls. However, in the prior art, this fundamental difference in loadings has not been reflected in the design of the Spar and similar cylindrical hulls.
The radial bulkheads 180 create very stiff points of support for the girders 140 on the outer shell. Under the dominant loading, which is hydrostatic, these supports inadvertently cause these girders to act as bending elements spanning between these supports and, in the case of circular cylinders, prevent them from acting far more efficiently as rings in compression. Since the girders 140 are acting in “beam action” instead of acting as compression rings, the capacity of the shell plate in circular cylinders to carry hydrostatic loadings is also greatly under utilized since only part of the plate is effective as the compression flange of the girders (“effective width”).
The straight sides 200 of the centerwell 100 necessarily cause the girders 140 of the centerwell 100 to act as bending elements under the dominant hydrostatic loadings. The radial bulkheads 180 themselves only see hydrostatic loading in the circumstances where an adjacent compartment floods but, in such circumstances, the girders also act as bending elements spanning between the centerwell shell and outer shell. All the girders for these shells and bulkheads must be located in the same horizontal plane so their end terminations can be tied together to provide structural continuity. Consequently, these end terminations have complex curved transitions where they join each other. These very labor-intensive transitions are required to mitigate “hot spot” stresses at these highly loaded locations but, they only reduce, not eliminate, the extent of these stresses. As a result, additional labor-intensive insert plates are normally included in the girder webs to reduce the remaining hot-spot stresses to values below stress allowables. “Tripping brackets” 220 (out-of-plane gusset-type lateral bracing for the girders) are added to brace the girders against torsional buckling.
The arrangement of the structural framing for cylindrical hulls in the prior art directly impacts the plan for the fabrication of sub assemblies and the erection of the full hull. In the prior art of Spar hulls, the cylindrical tanks are divided into sections (sub-assemblies), both in plan (with radial bulkheads) and longitudinally (with flats). These portions of the cylinder were pre-fabricated in jigs and then moved to the final assembly site where they were joined to make full circular sections. These sub-assemblies are normally constructed on their side primarily to use the weight of the section to conform the outer shell to the curvature of the jig or form. These sub-assemblies are removed from the jigs in an advanced state of structural completion and rotated one hundred eighty degrees to complete the pre-outfitting on the outer shell and then rotated again to be joined into the hull cylinder, which is assembled on its side. The cylindrical columns for Semis and TLPs are normally assembled vertically while the pontoon cylinders for Semi's and cylinders for Spars are normally assembled horizontally. Assembling cylinders when they are supported on one side by the fabrication supports requires the sub-assemblies to be very stiff to avoid unacceptable distortion of the lower section as the other sections above the lower section are added. While these sections are naturally very stiff when made as quadrants in the jigs and thus amenable to the loadings from horizontal assembly, this stiffness works against the need for flexibility to fit the sections together. The result is a contradiction in the stiffness requirements of erection handling versus fit-up that complicates the assembly process.
The present invention addresses the shortcomings in the known art by providing a more simplified structure. Radial bulkheads are eliminated by having the hard tank compartmented only with flats. Without radial bulkheads, the curved rings on the outer shell are configured in full circles and, in combination with the outer shell plate, are freed to act as compression rings that 1) exhibit a high degree of structural utilization and 2) virtually eliminate local “hot spot stresses” in the outer shell structural system, thus eliminating “insert plates” in the shell stiffening rings. These rings are laterally braced against torsional buckling using tension-type members in lieu of the “tripping brackets” common in the prior art. The tension-type bracing requires only a small fraction of the weight and fabrication labor of the tripping brackets.
Longitudinal stiffeners along the length of the outer shell terminate immediately before the location of a flat so the flats are neither penetrated by these stiffeners nor are the stiffeners made structurally continuous across the flats using pairs of brackets. As a result, the framing is simplified while Terminating the longitudinal stiffeners short of the flats requires that the ends be sniped (cut back) at 45 degree (American Bureau of Shipping requirement). These sniped ends may need to be reinforced to carry the local loads in the stiffener web in the area where the stiffener flange has been removed. This reinforcing can be accomplished in several ways but the preferred way is to square cut the end of the stiffener short of the flat approximately the depth of the stiffener and add a thicker piece of snipe-shaped plate to the flat side of the stiffener. Except at the locations of the circumferential splices of the outer shell plate, these reinforcing plates can be attached to the ends of the stiffeners in the shop where the welding positions and access are optimum.
The flooded centerwell is circular instead of rectangular and, without the radial bulkheads, its shell plate is freed to always act in tension from the hydrostatic loadings of the water contained inside. With the centerwell shell plate always in uniform hoop tension, longitudinal stiffeners are not required on this shell and the circular stiffening can be relatively small. The smooth circular shape of the shell and stiffening eliminates the hot spot stresses in these ring stiffeners so prevalent in the prior art. The circular centerwell also creates a constant distance between the inner and outer shells which allows a uniform pattern of stiffening for the flats compared to the prior art which had straight sides on the centerwell and a curved outer shell resulting in varying spans and irregular stiffening patterns between the shells.
For each flat, the stiffeners are curved into concentric circles that are supported by girders located on radial lines and spanning between the inner and outer shells. The circular pattern of the stiffeners insures the plate spans the same distance between stiffeners and between the edge stiffeners and the shell plates. The stiffener size increases with increases in radius to accommodate the increasing stiffener spans between radial girders towards the outer shell plate. The girders themselves are all identical but are varied in depth along their length, becoming deepest near the outer shell where the spans and thus the loads from the stiffeners are the largest.
With the cylinder compartmented only with flats, only one shaft for personnel access is required.
The closer spacing of the flats allows the compartments to be erected vertically with the flats themselves located near the ground. This permits full cylinders to be erected without deleterious effects from gravity, locates a larger percentage of the welding near the ground and provides full crane access throughout sub-assembly.
With full or partial compartments fabricated vertically then rotated 90 degrees to be joined to another section during final assembly, the flexibility of the end opposite the flat is valuable when joining it to the end of the adjacent section containing the flat since the end with the flat is very stiff. Since the longitudinal stiffeners do not penetrate the flats, only the outer and inner shell plates and the access shaft shell plate are circumferentially spliced together simplifying the connection work to be done in the erection phase.
The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the present invention, and the cost efficiencies attained by its use, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter, forming a part of this disclosure, in which a preferred embodiment of the invention is illustrated.
In the accompanying drawings forming a part of this specification and in which reference numerals shown in the drawings designate like or corresponding parts throughout the same:
As seen in
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As seen in
Each hull section 11 is constructed upside down compared with its in-place orientation. The circular flat plate 28 is placed on a level work surface as seen in
The construction of the outer shell is illustrated in
With the upper cylindrical section of the hull compartmented solely with flats, the compartment at the waterline will not normally require a second watertight outer shell section (cofferdam section) typical of the prior art. If the section of the hull that will be at the water line is required to have a cofferdam section for reasons of preference or special operational requirements, the construction of the cofferdam section and the portion of the hull inside the cofferdam section is the same as described above.
The construction of the inner shell 22 is illustrated in
To assemble one hull compartment, or partial compartment 11, one inner shell section is stood up with one of its ends adjacent to the flat plate 28 as seen in
To join one section 11 of the hull 10 to the next, a temporary erection brace assembly, similar to spokes on a bicycle wheel, not shown, is placed between the inner shell 22 and the outer shell 12 at the opposite end from the flat plate 28. As seen in
The invention has several advantages over the known art.
The radial bulkheads are eliminated. This eliminates rigid supports of the inner and outer shells at four places which allows both types of shell plate and their curved stiffening to act as full rings which greatly increases their structural efficiency compared to the prior art where the shell plate and girder stiffening acted primarily in bending. The smooth lines of the full rings compared to the many intersections of girders and struts in the prior art results in the elimination of nearly all “hot spot stress” areas in the main framing which results in the elimination of insert plates and other means of remediating the stress concentrations common in the prior art. Additionally, the area of stiffened plate eliminated with the radial bulkheads is approximately 10% more than the area of stiffened plate added for additional flats to complete the compartmentation, which contributes to the lower steel weights of the invention as well as its greatly enhanced constructability, compared to the prior art for the same sized hull.
The longitudinal stiffeners on the outer shell are not made structurally continuous across the flats. This configuration eliminates the practices of either 1) penetrating the flats with the stiffeners and sealing up the resulting holes or 2) adding brackets on each side of the flat at each stiffener. On a typical Spar hull, this configuration eliminates over 800 such penetrations and their seal-plates or over 1,600 brackets. Eliminating these penetrations or brackets allows the stiffener welding to be largely completed in the shop/pre-assembly stages while, in the prior art, the penetration and bracket work must necessarily be deferred until later in the fabrication sequence when the sub-assembly sections are connected at the erection site. This configuration further simplifies the construction by eliminating the need for the longitudinal stiffeners on either side of a flat to align with each other as was the case in the prior art.
Termination of the longitudinal stiffeners on the outer shell short of the flats causes the ends to cantilever from the last ring. This ring is spaced from the flat the proper distance to balance the bending moment in the stiffener at the cantilever with the maximum moments at other spans of the stiffeners resulting in the most efficient stiffener sizing. To maximize the cantilever moment capacity of the stiffeners, the free ends are laterally braced using the tension-type members. These slender members run transverse to the ends of the stiffeners, are attached to each stiffener and are anchored at each end so they act in tension under loadings from either axial direction. This approach eliminates bracket-type lateral bracing and results in significant savings in fabrication material and labor. Terminating the stiffeners short also requires they be cut back (sniped) at 45 degrees to meet the requirements of the American Bureau of Shipping. There are several ways to reinforce the sniped ends of the stiffeners, including: lapping a thicker snipe-shaped piece onto the end of the stiffener, replacing the sloping section of stiffener web with a thicker piece in line with the web, adding a stiffener perpendicular to the web and following the incline or adding a section of flange along the incline. The advantage of this invention is that any of the methods of reinforcement can be done in the shop using automated equipment in advance of assembling the stiffeners to the shell plate. An exception to this is: at the locations of the circumferential splices where the sniped shape reinforcements are pre-made and only positioned when the stiffeners are being added then permanently put in place after the circumferential welds on the shell plate are complete.
Similar to the lateral bracing for the ends of the longitudinal stiffeners, the invention laterally braces the curved rings on the outer shell (and the inner shell rings if required) using slender members transverse to these girders and anchored to the longitudinal stiffeners at either end of a compartment so they always act in tension under loadings from either axial direction. To be most effective, this type of bracing requires the rings in any one compartment between flats be of the same depth. This is easily accomplished in the design by setting a ring depth and varying: the ring spacing, the flange widths or thicknesses of the rings to accommodate the differing hydrostatic loadings at different locations along a compartment's depth. This type of lateral bracing virtually eliminates the need for the so-called “tripping brackets” used extensively in the prior art. Since there are over 3,000 tripping brackets (often measuring several feet in each direction) in a typical Spar hull, the lateral bracing approach in the present invention greatly reduces the material and labor required to complete the hull fabrication. This same lateral bracing technique is applicable to bracing the repetitive stiffening in any other parts of the hull.
The circular centerwell is always in hoop tension which allows the shell to be stiffened with only ring stiffeners and eliminates the need for longitudinal stiffeners which greatly simplifies the stiffening of this shell plate.
The concentric circular centerwell also provides a constant distance between the two shell plates. This allows a highly repetitive and uniform stiffening pattern for the flats using radial girders. Combined with the radial girders are circular stiffeners that create perpendicular intersections of all the girders with the stiffeners, which is very desirable for welding as well as creating uniform spans of the flat plate between stiffeners themselves and between stiffeners and the shell plates, thus eliminating variations and non-uniformities which beget the special stiffening, inserts, and other remediations common in the prior art.
All of the configuration details embodied in the present invention contribute to reducing the number of pieces that need to be cut, fitted, and welded together to form the completed cylinder. Eliminating the tripping brackets and eliminating the filling of holes in the flats were mentioned above, but the configuration of the rings themselves compared to the girders in the prior art, the elimination of longitudinal stiffeners on the centerwell shell and the uniformity of the stiffening patterns of the flats all contribute to a significant reduction in the number of pieces and fewer pieces translate into lower costs.
With the flats closer together, the compartments can be economically assembled with the flats parallel to the ground and the curved shell plates erected vertically so the effects of gravity do not affect the curvature of the shell plates as would be the case if the sections of shell plate were combined into full cylinders in the horizontal position. Vertical erection of each compartment locates a higher percentage of the welding close to the ground and facilitates crane access to the interior throughout the erection of a complete compartment.
While specific embodiments and/or details of the invention have been shown and described above to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it is to be understood that this invention may be embodied as more fully described in the claims, or as otherwise known by those skilled in the art (including any and all equivalents), without departing from such principles.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060070568 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |