Claims
- 1. A buoyancy system for a structure having at least one component being substantially stationary with respect to the bottom of a water covered area, the system comprising a set of buoyancy modules of engineered materials to apply an identified amount of buoyancy; the set of buoyancy modules being attached to the structure at a set of buoyancy load transfer locations.
- 2. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said leak prevention layer comprises an inside leak prevention layer.
- 3. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said leak prevention layer comprises an outside leak prevention layer.
- 4. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises cylindrical shapes.
- 5. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises triangular shapes.
- 6. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises hexagonal shapes.
- 7. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises saddle shapes.
- 8. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises truncated, pie-slice shapes.
- 9. The buoyancy system as in claim 1 wherein said set of buoyancy modules comprises octagonal shapes.
- 10. Apparatus for providing buoyancy to a submerged riser attached at its lower end to a well head on the sea floor; which comprises:
a plurality of submerged buoyancy modules associated with the riser for imparting an upward buoyancy force to the riser, wherein each buoyancy module is hollow and has an elongated shape with a longitudinal axis and is vertically oriented, the longitudinal axis of the buoyancy module being generally parallel to the longitudinal axis of the riser, some of the buoyancy modules being disposed at different vertical elevations along the riser in an arrangement so as to provide improved hydrodynamic performance to the riser, each buoyancy module providing a small fraction of the total buoyancy from all the modules for purposes of redundancy;
- 11. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the cross sectional shape of the buoyancy module on a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis is a shape selected from the group consisting of a circle, a triangle, a square, a polygon, a hexagon, a truncated pie slice, and a saddle.
- 12. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein some of the submerged buoyancy modules are disposed at the same vertical elevation on the riser, but are distributed uniformly around the outer circumference of the riser in a geometrical arrangement so as to provide improved hydrodynamic performance to the riser.
- 13. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein some of the submerged buoyancy modules are disposed in a stacked arrangement along a common vertical axis, and wherein the ends of adjacent pairs of modules are connected together by skirts conforming to the shapes of the ends of the modules.
- 14. The buoyancy system as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the buoyancy modules comprises a constrained mass having a density less than water.
- 15. The buoyancy system as in claim 14, wherein the buoyancy module is resiliently constrained by a material having a compressional load bearing capability.
- 16. The buoyancy system as in claim 14, wherein the buoyancy module is resiliently constrained by a corrosion-resistant wall.
- 17. The buoyancy system as in claim 14, further comprising a fiber optic fort monitoring the state of the constrained mass.
- 18. The buoyancy system of claim 1, where in each of the buoyancy modules is hollow, the hollow interior being filled with low density material.
- 19. The buoyancy system of claim 18, wherein he low density material is closed cell syntactic foam.
- 20. The buoyancy system of claim 18, wherein the low density material is flowable microspheres.
- 21. The buoyancy system of claim 18, wherein the low density material is a gas other than air.
- 22. The buoyancy system of claim 1, wherein the engineered material comprises lightweight material selected from a group consisting of glass fiber/polymeric resin, carbon fiber/polymeric resin, hybrid glass/carbon fiber polymeric resin, rubber reinforced with nylon fibers, and rubber reinforced with steel fibers.
- 23. The buoyancy system of claim 1, further including at least one interior-exterior pressure difference sensor associated with the buoyancy modules for sensing buoyancy module failure.
- 24. The buoyancy system of claim 1, further including at least one interior pressure sensor associated with the buoyancy modules for sensing buoyancy module failure.
- 25. The buoyancy system of claim 1, further including at least one interior temperature sensor associated with the buoyancy modules for sensing buoyancy module failure.
- 26. The buoyancy system of claim 1, further including at least one buoyancy one buoyancy force transfer monitor associated with the buoyancy modules for sensing buoyancy module failure.
- 27. The buoyancy system of claim 1, further including at least one interior moisture sensor associated with the buoyancy modules for sensing buoyancy module failure.
- 28. The buoyancy system of claim 1, wherein the interior of at least one of the buoyancy modules is divided into at least two compartments for providing redundancy to the buoyancy system in the event of partial failure of the buoyancy module.
- 29. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the submerged buoyancy modules comprise a material selected from the group consisting of composite material and steel.
- 30. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the skirts comprise elastomeric material.
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/643,185 filed Aug. 21, 2000.
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09643185 |
Aug 2000 |
US |
Child |
10360426 |
Feb 2003 |
US |