Heave compensation for vessels and/or their loads can be critical for offshore lifting and landing operations. This is because it may be desirable for a vessel subject to wave action to maintain the load in a fixed location and/or at a constant tension. Heave compensation systems may operate in a variety of ways including via active heave compensation modes where the system controls the position of the load, passive heave compensation modes where the system controls the tension on the load, and combinations of both active and passive heave compensation modes.
A winch-based heave compensation system may operate in both a passive and active mode, may be part of a main winch that controls the line supporting a load, and may include a number of sheaves that the line passes over as the winch undergoes a spooling movement. One disadvantage of some heave compensation systems is that the line moves over or flexes at one or more (often multiple) elements in the compensation system and may be damaged or fail due to fatigue caused by the line continuously bending back-and-forth over the elements (by travel or flexing without line travel) when the heave compensation system is operating. This problem is particularly present with lighter-weight lines made from fiber materials other than steel. Therefore, there is a need for a heave compensation system that operates to reduce the amount of fatigue on the line in order to prevent line damage or failure.
In one embodiment, a heave compensation system is provided that reduces stress and fatigue on a line by providing a direct acting heave compensator with a single sheave system that moves up and down on a curve profile defined by the heave compensator.
Another embodiment provides a heave compensation apparatus for a load suspended from one end of a line into a marine environment, where the other end of the line is handled by a vessel. The load compensation apparatus comprises: a sheave support base, a sheave that receives the line from a line handling device, a sheave mounting frame with an axle, and a compensator control that controls sheave position and motion. The line handling device may be located at a first location on the vessel and is at least partially responsible for handling the line. The sheave support base may be located at a second location on the vessel that is displaced from the first location. The sheave may be configured for receiving the line from the line handling device and for directing it to the load. The sheave mounting frame with the axle supports the sheave, where the sheave mounting frame is mounted on the sheave support base for reciprocating motion along a compensation path extending in the general direction of a heaving motion to be compensated. The compensator control may be operatively connected to the sheave mounting frame for causing the sheave mounting frame to controllably reciprocate along a compensation path in response to heaving motion of the vessel.
In another embodiment, an apparatus provides heave compensation for a load suspended from one end of a line into a marine environment, and the other end of the line is handled by a vessel. The apparatus includes a sheave that receives the line from a line handling device, and is controlled to move on a compensation path. The line handling device may be located at a first location on the vessel for handling the line. The sheave is configured to receive the line from the line handling device and to direct it to the load. The sheave may be movably coupled to a base located at a second location on the vessel displaced from the first location. A compensator control operably connected to the movable sheave provides reciprocating motion along a compensation path extending in the general direction of a heaving motion to be compensated. The compensation path follows a curve profile defined by the base that keeps an axle of the sheave at a substantially constant distance from the point at which the line leaves the line handling device to extend to the sheave.
a-d depict side, top, front and pictorial (respectively) views of a heave compensation apparatus.
Overview. Certain embodiments of the present invention provide a direct acting heave compensation system that employs a traction winch, a support base, and a movably mounted compensator sheave that receives a line extending from the traction winch to the compensator sheave. The line originates, for example, from a tension drum of the traction winch and extends a distance to the compensator sheave where it wraps around a portion of the sheave and then extends generally downward to terminate at the load. The line has a central drum tangent point where it takes off from the tension drum when the heave compensation system is at its central or normal position. In addition, when the heave compensation sheave is at maximum upward or a maximum downward compensation position, the line forms other tangent points at the tension drum, due to changes from the central position line angle. As the line moves from the drum tangent point of the maximum upward position to the drum tangent point of the minimum downward position, an arc-like path is described. The base for the movably mounted sheave is configured to provide a curved rail or guide surface having a curve profile determined generally by the arc-like motion from the various tangent points where the line departs off the traction winch as it extends to the support base. According to this embodiment, as the line pivots through the arc-like path, the line is carried along the curve profile of the rail by the movably mounted sheave. Because the sheave is movable along the rail and the curve profile reflects the sheave, line and tension drum location and geometry, at each heave compensation position of the sheave, it stays substantially the same distance from the corresponding tangent point of the line at the traction winch; thus, the line segment between the compensator sheave and the tension drum stays substantially the same length and the changes in stress in the line are reduced. The sheave rotates little or not at all in response to heave, and without sheave rotation, the line does not move over the sheave. In addition, the line only changes by a limited amount its angle at the tension drum at the point of first contact with the compensator sheave.
Heave compensation systems of the present design are suitable for offshore floating vessels including ships and mobile platforms. For example, the present heave compensation systems may be employed on offshore floating platforms for oil wells or on ships used for performing oil drilling, production and/or storage or servicing offshore installations. Applications of heave compensation systems may include deepwater lowering applications such as deepwater lowering of subsea structures, suction anchors, or any load requiring positioning on the seabed. Those skilled in the art will understand that any suitable vessel may employ the disclosed heave compensation systems, methods, and applications, which are not limited by the examples described.
Some embodiments provide heave compensation for loads suspended by a line. A load may be, for example, a 250-ton load of production or transmission equipment, an oil line, or any type of load suspended into a marine environment from offshore vessels. A line may be, for example, a wire rope or a fiber-type rope made from fibers such as polyethylene or Kevlar. In one example, the rope is a 160 mm fiber rope.
Turning to the figures,
Although a traction winch is shown in
In
Over-boarding structure or A-frame 150 with support lines 160 is provided to enable load 145 to be lifted from vessel 101, above and over heave compensation apparatus 100, and lowered toward the marine environment surface where A-frame 150 releases the load 145 from its lines 160 and transfers the load 145 to heave compensation apparatus 100 and line 140.
Heave Compensator.
Base halves 110, 111 include a curve profile defined at guide surfaces 106, 107, the shape of which correspond to a compensation path that keeps the axle 131 of the sheave support frame 130 at a substantially constant distance from the point at which the line 140 leaves the line handling device (not shown in
Guide surfaces 106, 107 serve as a guide for guiding movement of sheave mounting frame 130. The frame 130 may be movably supported by base 105 using one or more support devices, 120, 121. In some embodiments, sheave mounting frame 130 includes upper and lower pairs of rollers 135, 136 to cause the sheave mounting frame 130 to roll along the respective guide surfaces 106, 107 of the base halves 110, 111. In one example, rollers 135, 136 may be shaped in a manner that is complementary to guide surfaces 106, 107. Thus, guide surfaces 106, 107 may take the form of convex rails arranged to accept wheels having a concave contact surface. In another example, as seen in
Although rollers 135, 136 are shown in
Sheave mounting frame 130 mounts sheave 115 for rotation at sheave axle 131, and sheave 115 may be sized so as to accommodate any desirable line size, such as 80-160 mm fiber ropes. In addition, sheave 115 may be sized so that the D:d ratio (see discussion of
According to
It should be understood by those skilled in the art that other compensator control structures may alternatively or additionally be provided. For example, other extensible structures such as levers and/or winch systems may be provided to support and move the sheave mounting frame 130 for load balancing and controlling tension on the load.
According to some embodiments, the compensation path is a curved profile path defined generally by the rotation of a point fixed on the line 140 adjacent the sheave 115 around a fixed point on the line handing system 170. However, this is an approximation and, as noted below, the wrapping/unwrapping action at the sheave 115 and the line handling system 170 is also accommodated in the compensation path. A curved profile is defined by the guide surfaces 106, 107 on base 105, and the sheave mounting frame 130 rides on the guide surface. The shape of the guide surfaces 106, 107 enables the length of the line from the line handling system 170 to the sheave 115 to remain substantially the same.
The heave compensation system 100, according to some embodiments, can operate both when the line handling system 170 handling the line is stationary and when it is operational. Because the compensation system 100 operates when load 145 is in-hauled or paid out, heave is compensated for, and the stress on line 140 is attributable primarily to the line movement caused by the line handling system 170. That is, when the line is in-hauled or paid out from a winch, the heave compensation system 100 reduces or avoids additional travel and flexing by the line beyond what results from the operations of the winch.
In some embodiments, the vessel 101 includes a motion reference unit 162 (depicted in
Compensator control structures may be directed to exert an amount of pressure on the heave compensation apparatus required to hold the sheave 115 in place, or shift the sheave 115 up to reduce tension on the line or down to increase tension on the line. In some embodiments, the compensator in a fully extended position versus a fully retracted position may cause a change in line tension by + or −6% when operating in the passive heave compensation mode.
Compensator Base and Compensation Path.
In order to maintain a substantially constant length of line 140 between the line handling device 170 and the sheave 115, portions of heave compensation apparatus 100 are required to respond to vessel heave motions and to move the sheave 115 on its compensation path. In
In
The exact configuration of the curve profile 606 depends on the amount of line wear that may be tolerated in a given application. While zero line travel resulting from heave compensation is the most desirable, heave compensation that sharply reduces the line travel is also beneficial. Thus, the curve profile is selected to reduce or eliminate line travel and depends on several geometrical features of the system: the diameter of the sheave 615, the diameter of the drum 625 of the line holding system 620, the distance L between these two and the ratio of the line diameter to the root diameter (D:d ratio) of the sheave 615 and the drum 625. (If the line handling device did not have a drum, the geometry would involve the shape of some other departure surface for the line 640.) In general terms, the curve profile of the compensation path will be arc-like with inflections resulting from wrapping and unwrapping of the line 640 on the sheave 615 and on the drum 625 of the line handling system as the sheave 615 travels in either direction around a central position on the compensation path. For example, when sheave 615 travels from the lower extreme position A to an upper position B as shown in
As can be seen, when sheave is 615 in position A, line 640 has a tangent point 660 on sheave 615 and a tangent point 650 on drum 625. When sheave 615 moves to position B, the tangent points migrate as wrapping occurs. Sheave 615 has a new tangent point 662 that arises when a segment S1 of line 640 is wrapped onto sheave 615. Similarly, drum 625 has a new tangent point 652 that arises when a segment S2 of line 640 is wrapped onto drum 625. The effect of this wrapping is to shorten the segment of line that extends between the two tangent points defined at sheave 615 and drum 625, because these are now closer together. Where sheave 615 and drum 625 have the same diameter, the amount of wrapping will be the same on each and the amount of shortening of the segment of line that extends between the two tangent points is essentially two times the amount of wrapping that occurs in the arc formed by migration of the respective tangent points defined at sheave 615 and drum 625. Thus, the curve profile 606 of the compensation path deviates from an arc-like ideal of a radius around a fixed point at drum 625, to allow for shortening of the line segment that extends between the two tangent points. The inflection of the curve profile is generally indicated by dotted line 607 at the upper portion of curve profile 606.
In further embodiments, compensator control structures such as cylinders may additionally or alternatively be mounted on or in other areas of the base 105 or vessel 101. For example, compensator control structures may be mounted below a sheave mounting frame so that the compensators operate by pushing upward against the sheave mounting frame in order to move it in the upward direction along the compensation path.
The embodiment described above in
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
This application claims benefit of priority to the provisional application U.S. Ser. No. 60/822,490, filed Aug. 15, 2006.
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