The invention is generally related to the installation of offshore structures and more particularly to the installation of a topside structure on a substructure.
A floatover is an operation for placing a topside structure onto a substructure in an offshore environment. The substructure can be a bottom founded or a floating structure. The topside structure is loaded out onto a transport vessel (hereafter termed a barge) at the fabrication yard and towed to the installation site. At the site the barge is positioned between the legs of the substructure and the topside is lowered until the legs of the topside stab into the legs of the substructure. The topside is lowered by a combination of ballasting the barge downward and collapsing mechanical or hydraulic arrangements that support the topside above the barge deck.
In most floatovers to date a single barge hull floats between two parallel rows of legs of the substructure. The region between the two parallel rows of legs is termed the “slot”. The substructure must be designed so that the slot is devoid of any framing members and the slot must be deeper than the maximum draft of the barge. When the barge is moved into the slot the barge floats over much of the substructure, hence the term floatover. The final position of the barge in the slot, where the topside can be lowered and mated with the substructure, is termed the floatover position.
In some cases the basic design of the substructure makes it impossible to provide a slot for the entry of the barge. For example, the substructure of a spar buoy platform is a single, large diameter, vertical cylinder. Because a slot is not possible, the topside is brought to the installation site on two parallel barges. During the floatover, the substructure fits in the space between the two barges with the topside spanning between the two barges. The two parallel barge hulls with the topside spanning between the two hulls form a catamaran. Hence, this type of operation is called a “catamaran” floatover.
The barge with the topside on board moves in six degrees of freedom in response to the sea state at the installation site. Therefore, the legs of the topside are moving relative to the mating legs of the substructure. If there is too much relative motion between the mating legs of the topside and the substructure, then the floatover must wait for lower sea states. To reduce the waiting time, relative motion between the mating legs in the horizontal plane has been restrained by various devices. Other devices have been employed to reduce vertical impact loads between the mating legs.
The horizontal position of the barge as it enters and leaves the slot must be carefully controlled so that the barge does not impact the substructure and cause damage. The control of the position of the barge during slot entry and slot exit is critical to the success of the floatover. The features that control the horizontal position of the transport barge during slot entry and exit must be compatible with the features that restrain the relative motion of the mating legs at the floatover position.
The devices and methods that control the position of the transport barge in the horizontal plane during slot entry and slot exit, and the devices and methods that control the relative motion of the mating legs in the horizontal plane, while the barge is in the floatover position, is the prior art of interest herein.
Primary and secondary mooring arrangements have been used alone to control the horizontal position of the transport barge during slot entry, at the floatover position, and during slot exit. The primary mooring arrangement is a spread mooring array with lines that run between winches on the barge and anchors at the sea bottom. The secondary mooring arrangement is an array of mooring lines that runs between winches or capstans on the barge and attachment points on the substructure.
Cyclical motions of the transport barge caused by wave forces are only slightly affected by the actions of the primary and secondary mooring arrangements. The spread mooring array is a soft arrangement that is used to resist steady state, or slowly varying forces which are produced by constant velocity wind or ocean currents. The action of the waves causes the barge position to cycle about a mean position. The primary mooring arrangement maintains the mean position of the barge. The secondary mooring arrangement is used to restrain motions caused by the slow drift force, wind gusts, or an upset caused by a broken primary mooring line. The interface features that mate the topside legs and the substructure legs must allow for the wave induced cyclical motions, among other things.
Instead of relying entirely on the primary and secondary mooring arrangements, some slot type floatovers have employed bumpers to control the transverse position of the barge and restrain sway and yaw. Bumpers can either be rigid or flexible. Typically, a rigid bumper is a steel structure connected directly to the substructure (
A slot floatover that uses only primary and secondary mooring arrangements might be termed a “loose” slot floatover because the transverse motions that must be accommodated by the interface features are larger than those permitted by the “tight” slot floatover. Conversely, the transverse forces between the barge and the substructure are higher for the tight slot floatover than the transverse forces are for the loose slot floatover. An intermediate result is obtained when flexible bumpers are used. Typically, bumpers are made flexible with a resilient material, such as rubber. The flexible bumpers are stiffer than the secondary mooring arrangement in the transverse direction, but much less stiff than the rigid bumpers. Usually, the flexible bumpers replace the secondary mooring system during slot entry and exit, and secondary mooring lines (spring lines) are rigged to control the mean longitudinal position once the barge has reached the floatover position (
The most common substructure is a jacket, as shown in
In environments that are hostile to floatovers, special features have been used to increase the utilization rate of the installation equipment, i.e., the number of days in the installation season in which the floatover can be attempted. The special features increase the utilization rate by reducing the surge and sway of the transport barge at the floatover position. These special features have been used in areas where the sea state is dominated by swells most of the year. The slots are oriented in the prevailing direction of the swells to minimize sway as much as possible, but the swells produce significant surge. During slot entry and exit the mean transverse position of the barge is controlled by some combination of primary and secondary mooring systems and flexible bumpers. During slot entry and exit the surge of the barge is not restrained.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,527,132 describes an arrangement of mechanical and hydraulic devices that has been used successfully to limit sway and surge at the floatover position. However, it is a complicated and expensive arrangement to build and to maintain in an operating condition. The arrangement works in the floatover position, but does not help during slot entry and exit.
In some canal systems and entrances to some drydocks a variety of rolling bumpers are used to control the movement and position of ships and barges.
The present invention addresses the shortcomings in the known art. The invention is an apparatus and method for restraining surge and sway of the barge during floatover of a topside onto a substructure. Roller bumpers provided on the substructure guide the barge during slot entry and exit without the use of secondary mooring lines and restrain sway at the floatover position. Dedicated vertical bearing surfaces are provided on the substructure at the entry to the slot. Resilient bumpers are provided on the barge. The resilient bumpers engage with the dedicated vertical bearing surfaces on the substructure and position the barge in the floatover position in the longitudinal direction. A tug tows the barge into the slot until the resilient bumpers mounted on the barge contact the dedicated bearing surface at the entrance to the slot. The tug continues pulling to maintain the barge in the floatover position until the topside is set on the substructure. Then another tug tows the barge out of the slot.
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 operating advantages 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:
The plan view of
With use of the apparatus of the invention, the floatover installation is carried out as follows. As seen in
While the arrangement greatly reduces surge, it is not fully eliminated. The resilient bumpers 22 compress and extend throughout the floatover operation. Sometimes, a small gap may open between the bumpers 22 and the vertical bearing surfaces 16. But the bollard pull of the tug and the stiffness of the bumpers 22 are such that the offset of the mating legs does not exceed the maximum allowable offset as illustrated in
Sway is greatly reduced by the restraint offered by the roller bumpers 14. The stiffness of the roller bumpers 14 is such that the offset of the mating legs does not exceed the maximum allowable offset as illustrated in
The invention eliminates the secondary mooring lines of the prior art. Also eliminated are the winches and powered capstans associated with the secondary mooring lines. If spring lines would have been used, as shown in
The drawings that illustrate the arrangement and method of the invention do not show any of the primary mooring lines indicated in the prior art because they are not pertinent to the invention. Depending on the particular floatover design, some, all, or none of the primary mooring lines shown in the prior art may be used.
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 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.