The present invention relates generally to torpedo type anchors, and in a particular, though non-limiting embodiment, to a folding torpedo anchor useful for attaching objects to a seabed and methods of deployment therefor.
Successful operation of a sea vessel in deep water often requires the vessel to be temporarily or permanently moored to an associated seabed. This is most commonly achieved by attaching mooring lines to the vessel, and then fixing the remote ends of the mooring lines to the seafloor using anchors. While sea anchors have been in use for more than 2000 years, the development of deepwater anchors was brought about by the oil & gas industry's more recent venturing into deep waters. Typical for anchors deployed in deep water is the steep angle between the anchor line and the seabed, which leads to a high uplift load being imparted to the anchor. In order to sustain these high vertical loads, deepwater anchors must be entrenched deeply into the seabed. As a consequence, installation procedures for such anchors are usually complex and require the involvement of one or more installation vessels for a considerable time period.
Driven mainly by the high cost of marine operations, the total cost associated with a mooring system installation in deep water constitutes a significant financial investment for any offshore facility requiring such operations. With the maturing of giant hydrocarbon reservoirs in shallow water, the oil & gas industry has been forced to turn toward smaller fields and toward fields located in deeper waters. The increasingly marginal economics of such deepwater fields make field development costs a particular concern, and elevates the need for anchors that can be installed quickly and inexpensively.
Rapid anchor deployment is also of importance for temporary offshore installations where a vessel remains on site for only a short time. This is especially true for regions prone to violent storms like the Gulf of Mexico, because vessels operating in such regions must regularly cope with hurricanes and other sudden, violent weather phenomena. In particular, lead times frequently prove too short to move the vessel out of the path of an approaching hurricane. In such instances the vessel is often abandoned and left to weather nature's destructive forces. History has shown that currently used temporary mooring systems are insufficient to sustain a hurricane environment. For example, in the year 2005 two hurricanes occurring in the Gulf of Mexico in rapid succession lead to numerous offshore drilling rigs to break loose from their moorings. In order to prevent such accidents, rapid-deployment anchors could be used to reinforce the mooring systems of vessels operating in hurricane regions.
The two main types of anchors currently used for deepwater applications are plate anchors and vertical piles. Different subgroups of these two main types can be distinguished primarily by their methods of installation. For example, plate anchors may be embedded by dragging them into the seafloor and are then called drag embedded plate anchors, or DEPLAs. Alternatively, the anchor can be implanted in the seafloor by a suction pile; these anchors are called suction pile embedded plate anchors or SEPLAs.
Vertical piles, on the other hand, are conventionally driven into the seafloor through hammering, while suction pile anchors use a hydrostatic pressure differential to force them into the soil. Some efforts have also been made to drive piles and anchors into the seafloor by means of explosive charges or pressurized gas but none of these technologies are currently in commercial use in the offshore industry. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,682,559, No. 3,032,000, No. 3,036,542, No. 3,054,123, and No. 3,291,092 provide descriptions of these efforts.
More recently, piles have been installed by being dropped into the sea and allowed to freefall, thereby impacting into the seabed. These latter types of piles are also known as torpedo anchors or deep penetrating anchors (or DPAs). An example of this approach can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,106,199, which discloses a pile for anchoring floating structures in deep water that features an elongated tubular body partly filled with ballast and radial fins attached to its aft. During installation, the pile is lowered into the sea to a predetermined depth and then released, thereby allowing it to descend in free fall and ultimately penetrate the sea floor. Another free-fall type anchor is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,166 B1. In the '166 patent, the anchor has large flukes extending radially from the shank. In order to generate sufficient soil friction after installation, the flukes have a surface area constituting a substantial portion of the anchor's total surface area. U.S. Pat. No. 6,941,885 B2 describes another free-falling anchor with radial fins attached not only to the tail section, but also to the nose section of the anchor. It is generally understood by those of skill in the art that fins disposed on the nose section will facilitate relatively deeper entrenchment of the anchor into the seabed.
There has been, therefore, a longstanding need for an anchor that combines the simple and fast installation of torpedo anchors with the high vertical holding capacity of plate anchors. There has also been a need for a means of insuring a stable and controlled descent during free fall, even when an anchor is launched from the water surface. There has also been a need for modular anchor construction methods that allow adjustment of the anchor's ballistic properties for a specific combination of water depth and seafloor condition. There has also been a need for a design that allows fast anchor recovery and redeployment. And finally, there has long been a need for an anchor well suited for temporary moorings as well as for permanently moored facilities used in the development of marginal oil fields.
A substantially solid torpedo pile is provided, including at least a substantially solid, longitudinally elongated anchoring member, wherein the anchoring member further includes a tapered tip, a shaft, and a connecting member.
Also provided is a substantially solid torpedo pile wherein the anchoring member further includes a plurality of inter-connectible modules.
Also provided is folding torpedo pile including at least a substantially solid, longitudinally elongated anchoring member, wherein the anchoring member further comprises a tapered tip, a shaft, and a connecting member; and at least one fluke member, wherein the fluke member further includes an end portion pivotally disposed in communication with the anchoring member, so that the fluke member pivots from a first position substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the anchoring member to a second position substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the anchoring member.
Also provided is a folding torpedo pile wherein the anchoring member further includes a plurality of inter-connectible modules.
A method of deploying a torpedo pile in a body of water is also provided, wherein the method includes connecting the pile to a connecting member; connecting a first portion of the connecting member to a first deployment position, and connecting a second portion of the connecting member to a second deployment position, wherein the first deployment position and the second deployment position are separated by a spatial distance; releasing the first portion of the connecting member from the first deployment position while the second portion of the connecting member remains connected to the second deployment position; and allowing the pile and the first portion of the connecting member to free fall through the body of water and thereafter penetrate into a ground surface disposed beneath the body of water, while the second portion of the connecting member remains connected to the second deployment position.
The main embodiment of the present invention effectively combines features of a torpedo anchor with features of a plate anchor, the combination of which is unknown in the prior art. The anchor is installed by means of free fall and subsequent penetration into the seafloor following impact. Once embedded in the seafloor, a pulling force exerted on the anchor line will deploy the anchor flukes from their longitudinal launch position into an extended holding position. With the flukes deployed in a holding position, the anchor is able to generate a high resistance against uplift forces. During anchor recovery the connection of the flukes to the anchor shaft is released, which allows the flukes to rotate back into their recovery position. At that point the anchor force is greatly reduced, and the anchor can be pulled out and recovered for redeployment. The holding position, launch position, and recovery position of the anchor are depicted in
In a deployed configuration the flukes extend from the anchor body at an angle of about 90 degrees measured relative to an anchor shaft 102. At the top of the anchor a shackle 105 provides a connection means for the hawser. When a tensile mooring force is applied to the anchor at the shackle 105, the load is transferred to the shaft 102, where a sleeve 107 distributes the load to the individual flukes through one or more struts 108.
Sleeve 107 is disposed in such a manner that it can slide upwardly along the shaft 102. Downward travel, however, is limited by a load shoulder disposed along a portion of the shaft 102. Struts 108 are depicted as chains in
1. Anchor Stability
In order to function properly, the weight of a torpedo anchor has to be significantly larger than its buoyancy. Once an anchor is dropped into the water, it will accelerate due to its weight until the drag imparted by the water is approximately equal to its submerged weight. At that point, the anchor is considered to have reached its terminal (or equilibrium) velocity. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that while it would take an infinite amount of time for an anchor to reach its absolute equilibrium velocity, a typical torpedo anchor will reach around 99% of its terminal velocity in just a few seconds.
In order to achieve the correct penetration depth, the anchor must have proper velocity, kinetic energy, and alignment with respect to its vertical direction prior to impacting the seabed. While velocity and kinetic energy are determined by the anchor's submerged weight, hydrodynamic drag, and the desired launch elevation, the angular alignment is strongly influenced by the anchor's directional stability. Since the magnitude of the drag is also strongly dependent on the anchor's angular position during free fall, it is evident that directional stability of a torpedo anchor is of crucial importance for proper and predictable anchor installation.
Contrary to typical ship designs, the location of the center of buoyancy does not significantly affect stability. Instead, directional stability is primarily determined by the position of the center of hydrodynamic pressure relative to the center of gravity. In general, an arbitrarily shaped solid anchor in free fall is not stable in its angular position. However, another aspect of the invention contemplates that stability can be lent to the anchor while traveling through the water by using a plurality of attached fins 103 or the like disposed in mechanical communication with the anchor's tail section, as indicated in
Another possibility for stabilizing the anchor is to attach one or more trailing bodies 422 and 423 using a stabilizer connecting means, for example, a cable or chain, as depicted in
A further embodiment of a trailing body is shown in an elevated view in
2. Modular Anchor Design
In addition to the directional stability, a torpedo anchor has to achieve sufficient impact velocity and impact energy in order to be able to penetrate the seafloor to the required depth. When it is desired to use a particular anchor for different soil conditions or for different mooring loads, may be advantageous to control the impact velocity of the anchor more precisely. For a given anchor diameter and drop height, the velocity and kinetic energy of the anchor is primarily influenced by its weight. For example, changing the length of the anchor will also generally change its weight, and thereby increase the system's terminal velocity when deployed. Another parameter influencing the penetration depth is the shape of the penetration head.
Accordingly, it is contemplated in further aspects of the invention that it is advantageous to facilitate reconfiguration of a torpedo anchor so that its weight, shape, and center of gravity can be adjusted to fit the particular conditions in which it is deployed. Flexible reconfiguration can be achieved when the torpedo anchor is formed from several modular sections, as shown on
In
3. Anchor Installation
Possible installation methods for the torpedo anchors claimed herein are illustrated in
Another exemplary installation method in which two installation vessels are employed is illustrated in
Yet another example method for installing a torpedo anchor from the water surface with the entire mooring line attached is shown in
The foregoing is provided for illustrative purposes only, and is not intended to describe all possible aspects of the present invention. Those of ordinary skill in the pertinent arts will appreciate that minor changes to the description, and various other modifications, omissions and additions can be made without departing from either the spirit or scope of the invention as claimed.