This invention relates to systems for supporting the sidewalls and tops of semi-membrane tanks used to store and transport liquids at temperatures substantially differing from ambient temperatures, including particularly for liquids such as liquefied natural gas (LNG), liquefied petroleum gas and anhydrous ammonia, which may be stored and transported at temperatures substantially below ambient temperature. The invention can also be applied to semi-membrane tanks for the containment of liquids stored and transported at temperatures substantially higher than ambient temperatures.
Semi-membrane tanks are not self-supporting. Their sidewalls require support from a surrounding support structure. U.S. Pat. No. 5,727,492 describes semi-membrane tanks having sidewalls of curved-plate construction, although flat-plate construction with relatively light stiffening members may also be used for semi-membrane tanks. In either case a surrounding support structure is required. As described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,727,492, surrounding support structure may include the inner hull of a double-hulled tanker or a grid of beams supporting a storage tank, for example, in a land-based facility. Semi-membrane tank sides and top are connected to the surrounding support structure through insulating supports or support assemblies.
The bottom of a semi-membrane tank normally is of flat-plate construction and rests on load-bearing insulation that in turn rests on underlying support structure. The tank bottom and load bearing insulation may be flat, as in one horizontal plane parallel to the underlying support structure or in several sloped planes oriented towards a fixed point to facilitate drainage. Typically the tank bottom will contract and expand about said fixed point which is normally located either at its geometric center or at another point vertically aligned with an expansion dome on the top of the tank. Such fixed point is typically maintained at a fixed location by a combination of structural keys affixed to the external surface of the tank bottom. The keys extend radially from said fixed point and mate with keyways in the load-bearing insulation normally oriented along the transverse and longitudinal axes of the tank. With changes in temperature as the tank is filled and emptied, the tank bottom contracts and expands by sliding over the load bearing insulation against which it is held by gravity.
The temperature of the sidewalls of the tank and the tank top also deviate significantly from the normally ambient temperature of the surrounding support structure as the tank is filled. This thermal deviation causes shrinkage, if the tank is used for cold liquid, and tends to subject the tank to significant thermal stresses. The method of support between the tank and surrounding support structure will significantly influence the level and distribution of these thermal stresses.
Insulation systems typically are secured directly to tank surfaces after tank construction is substantially complete. Insulated support systems for semi-membrane tanks are typically attached directly to surrounding support structure which is made integral with longitudinal and transverse structure in the case of a shipboard installation.
Published U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003/0066834A1 describes an array of support assemblies for use in a support system for semi-membrane tank. The assemblies are the components intermediate to the tank walls and the surrounding support structure. Assemblies of that published patent application include three components or blocks: a first block rigidly attached to a tank wall, a second block rigidly attached to the surrounding support structure, and a third block intermediate to the first two. The third block slidingly engages the first block, permitting sliding movement along a first line parallel to the plane of the tank wall, and the third block slidingly engages the second block, permitting sliding movement along a second line, perpendicular to the first, also parallel to the plane of the tank wall. In combination, the two sliding movements permit orthogonal movement, in the plane of tank wall, of the tank wall relative to the support structure. The support system prevents inward and outward movement perpendicular to the sidewalls and top of the tank.
If one considers a rectangular tank having four sidewalls, a top and a bottom, it will be appreciated that unrestrained thermal contraction resulting from lowered temperatures causes each of those six members to contract in its plane. In effect the tank attempts to become smaller by pulling inwardly away from the surrounding support structure to which it is attached by a support system. Walls of semi-membrane tanks must have at least fixed points aligned with the fixed expansion dome projecting through the top. Further, the walls and top, which are not self-supporting, must be supported vertically, and the walls must also be supported perpendicular to their respective planes. The support system of, for example, U.S. Patent Publication 2003/0066834A1 permits only contraction in the plane of each wall and prevents inward movement away from the support structure. Certain support assemblies are fixed against vertical movement of the walls and therefore, support the tank walls. The restriction against motion perpendicular to the plane of each wall imposes substantial thermal stresses at the edges where a tank wall meets the top, the bottom or another wall. These intersections must therefore be both sufficiently flexible to accommodate contraction and sufficiently robust to afford acceptable stress levels in the tank structural material. Flexibility is typically achieved by utilizing edges having substantial curved cross-sectional shapes that are capable of accepting considerable distortion as the tank contracts. The radius of curvature must be sufficiently large to permit such distortion without reaching unacceptable stress. The thickness of the structural material of the curved edges must be sufficiently thick and strong so as to prevent buckling and to maintain acceptable stress levels under all temperature conditions caused by the tank being full, empty or partially full. Small-radius curved edges of relatively lightweight construction are inadequate for this purpose, because of the magnitude of stress levels.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a support arrangement for semi-membrane tank walls and top that provides a thermally insulated structural attachment between the tank and its surrounding support structure that overcomes the disadvantages of existing arrangements and improves the efficiency of constructing and installing such tanks.
An aspect of this invention is support assemblies that permit a wall or top of a semi-membrane tank to move in and out perpendicularly to the plane of the wall or top and simultaneously accommodate shrinkage and expansion of the wall or top in either one line in the plane of the wall or top or in perpendicular lines in that plane.
Deployment of support assemblies according to this invention in arrays across semi-membrane tank walls provides support for the walls, including needed vertical support, while minimizing thermally induced stresses at edges formed by the intersection of a wall with the top, bottom or another wall.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is arrays of support assemblies that permit a reduction in the radius of curvature of tank edges as compared to existing systems discussed above, with a concomitant increase in tank volume, and that further permit a reduction in the amount of tank structural material, thereby simplifying construction and reducing construction costs.
Another aspect of the present invention is utilizing support assemblies to secure sheets or panels of tank insulation in place, for example, the use of flanged devices securing support assemblies to the tank in combination with flanged collars secured to the support assemblies to which insulation panels are secured to minimize heat transfer to the tank.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is a support system for the walls of a semi-membrane tank and, optionally, the tank bottom, that includes the surrounding support structure and means for slidingly engaging the surrounding support structure with an outer containment structure such as a tanker's inner hull or a shore installation's outer frame constructed on site, for example the attachment of vertical keys to the tank support systems for walls, which keys slidingly engage keyways attached to the surrounding ship structure. This aspect simplifies tank installation by securing the tank walls and bottom, for example, the surrounding ship structure by the simple act of engaging the keys and keyways as the surrounding support structure containing the tank is lowered into the ship's hull. Keys and keyways in the preferred embodiment are preferentially tapered in cross section and as well as vertically to facilitate engagement as the tank and surrounding support structure are lowered into the surrounding ship or shore-based structure.
A feature of this invention is that the walls and top are allowed a relatively minor deviation from plane at low temperature.
In this application and the appended claims, certain terms have the meanings that follow:
“Wall” means a vertically oriented sidewall of a semi-membrane tank. Walls of semi-membrane tanks are arranged in a geometric pattern, for example, a rectangular, trapezoidal or hexagonal or cylindrical tank. Walls of such tanks are planar, if made of flat plates, or approximately planar, if constructed from curved plates. Such walls are referred to in this application variously as “flat” or “planar”. A cylindrical tank has one continuous wall forming the cylinder.
“Plane of a wall” means the major planar outer surface at ambient temperature of a straight-sided wall of flat-plate construction or the vertical plane through the cusps joining curved plates in such a wall.
“Plane of a top” means the major planar outer surface of a tank top at ambient temperature.
“Surrounding support structure” is the structure to which support assemblies are attached away from the tank. Surrounding support structure may, or may not be integral with the outer containment structure such as the surrounding ship structure. Alternatively, surrounding support structure may be a lifting frame, a framework in which a tank is assembled. The surrounding support structure may be fitted with vertical keys which engage keyways integral with said outer containment structure, or vice versa, as a tank is lowered into its final location.
“Outer containment structure” is the structure outside surrounding support structure, if they are not one and the same. For walls in a tanker installation it is commonly the inner longitudinal hull structure and the transverse hull bulkhead structure including bracing members attached thereto, and for the top it is commonly the main deck of a double hull tanker. Outer containment structure for walls in a shore installation is commonly a framework of interconnected beams extending upwardly from a concrete base on the ground.
“Ramp” means an angled surface projecting outwardly from the tank that slidingly engages a complementary surface supported by the surrounding support structure. This surface may be planar or may have one degree of curvature with its axis parallel to the angle of the ramp. Movement “along the ramp” means movement up or down the ramp parallel to the axial centerline of the ramp surface. Movement “across the ramp” or “cross-ramp” means movement parallel to the ramp surface but in a direction perpendicular to the axial centerline of the ramp surface, if the ramp surface is flat, or parallel to the chord of the arc of the surface, if the surface is curved. Movement up or down a ramp can be broken into two perpendicular components of Cartesian coordinates, for example a component along an x axis and a component along a y axis. If a ramp is placed horizontally on a vertical surface, one component of movement parallel to the ramp is horizontal and parallel to the plane of the wall and the other component is also horizontal but perpendicular to the plane of the wall; and movement across the ramp is vertical and parallel to the plane of the wall. If a ramp is placed vertically on a vertical surface, one component of movement parallel to the ramp is vertical and parallel to the plane of wall or to the axis of the cylinder, if the tank is cylindrical, and the other component is horizontal but perpendicular to the plane of the wall or to the axis of the cylinder; and movement across the ramp is horizontal and parallel to the plane of the wall or the tangent of a cylindrical wall.
“Ramped away” from a point or line in a tank wall or top means for a support assembly that the member attached to the tank wall or top has a ramp surface acutely angled toward that point or line.
“Support assembly” means an assemblage of interlocked structural components or members spaced between the tank wall or top and the surrounding support structure that together allow for attachment of the wall or top to the surrounding support structure.
Support assemblies according to this invention permit a tank wall or top to move relative to the surrounding support structure in at least two directions, namely, in one direction perpendicular to the plane of the wall or top or to the axis of the cylinder of a cylindrical wall, that is, inwardly away from the support structure as the tank shrinks and outwardly toward the support structure as the tank expands; and in at least one direction parallel to the plane of the wall or top or to the axis of the cylinder of a cylindrical wall, that is, toward a fixed point or a line in the plane of the wall or toward the axis of the cylinder as the wall or top shrinks and away from such a point as the tank expands. Movement in two directions is accomplished by means of a “two dimension” support assembly that is angled relative to those two directions of movement and permits movement along the ramp. As the wall or top shrinks in the plane of the wall or top, or as a cylindrical wall shrinks, the ramp attached to the wall or top translates relative to its complementary surface, thereby deflecting the ramp inwardly perpendicular to the plane of the wall or top or toward the axis of a cylindrical wall. By appropriately sizing the ramping angle, appropriate inward deflection obtains for minimizing stress at points which otherwise would be subjected to the highest thermal stresses. Thus, a ramp near a fixed point, for example, the midpoint of a flat wall's length, will translate a shorter distance in the plane of the wall and thereby deflect a shorter distance perpendicular to that plane than will a ramp further out from said fixed point, thereby accommodating the greater amount of deflection of the latter as the tank shrinks. In this way positive inward support of a tank wall or top away from the surrounding support structure is maintained as the tank shrinks and expands while the tank wall or top is prevented from moving outwardly due to mechanical forces, such as rolling or pitching of a ship or the pressure of liquid cargo, at all temperatures. Calculating ramp angles is a matter of design based on the thermal properties of a wall or top and specific tank geometry and is within the skill of the art. Placed horizontally, two dimension support assemblies provide vertical support for the tank wall.
Other support assemblies according to this invention additionally permit movement in the plane of the wall or top perpendicular to the first direction. These assemblies, therefore, permit orthogonal movement in the plane of wall or top as well as movement perpendicular to the plane of the wall or top. The added degree of freedom of movement is provided by a “three dimension” support assembly.
Support assemblies according to this invention can be included in arrays of supports between tank walls or top and the surrounding support structure. Each array for a planar wall or top includes a “center of thermal fixity” which is either a point of rigid attachment or a point which has no thermal movement. The center of thermal fixity for each such wall will be at a common height above the tank bottom and horizontally aligned with the fixed point of the top determined by the expansion dome, namely the center point of the dome. Each planar wall array will further include a row of support assemblies extending horizontally away from the center of thermal fixity in both directions. Each support assembly in this row is a two dimension support assembly which permits movement only along the ramp, and the ramp member is rigidly attached to the tank with the ramp surface oriented horizontally away from the fixed point, that is, travel up the ramp is travel away from the center of thermal fixity. Each support assembly in this row provides vertical support for the tank wall, as vertical movement of the wall relative to the support structure is not permitted. Each array for a cylindrical wall includes multiple points of thermal fixity, preferably located at or near the bottom of the wall. Each array for a cylindrical wall will include a multitude of two dimension and three dimension support assemblies disposed vertically in a pattern over the surface of the wall, preferably along a series of vertical lines spaced around the wall.
Each array for a planar wall or top also includes additional support assemblies according to this invention. Those additional assemblies may be either two dimension support assemblies, in which case the ramps are oriented radially away from the center of thermal fixity, or three dimension support assemblies, in which case the ramps are in horizontal rows and oriented horizontally away from a vertical line through the center of thermal fixity. Similar arrays may be used for the tank top.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
Support systems according to this invention include arrays of support assemblies, preferably two member support assemblies, distributed over the top and each side wall and connecting each wall or top to surrounding support structure by sliding engagement so as to permit each point of such engagement of assembly member attached to said wall or top to move inwardly perpendicular to the plane of the wall or top and toward the center of thermal fixity in the plane of said wall or top when the tank cooled, either from ambient temperature to below ambient temperature for a cold tank such as an LNG tank or from heated temperature to ambient temperature for a hot tank. This array may but need not include a fixed support at which each wall or top is rigidly attached to surrounding support structure. Depending on the design of the array and the orientation of the support assemblies, particular assemblies accommodate either one or two degrees of freedom parallel to the plane of the wall or top to permit the required movement. At least some of the support assemblies, which necessarily accommodate only one such degree of freedom, provide the vertical support required for each wall. Tops of semi-membrane tanks most commonly have the center of thermal fixity at the geometric center of the top, where the expansion dome penetrates the tank.
Member 2 is a three dimensional elongated solid T-shaped piece wherein top portion 4 of the elongated “T” is ramped outwardly from element 8 as shown or, alternatively, from element 7 (not shown). Elongated portion 4 includes ramped surfaces 5 and 6. Member 3 is a solid piece that is complementary to member 2. It includes an elongated, T-shaped ramped recess 9 that is ramped outwardly from element 7 as shown or, alternatively, from element 8 (not shown). Recess 9 has top surface 10 that slidingly engages surface 5 of member 2 and bottom surfaces 11 that slidingly engages surfaces 6, whereby portion 4 can move along the ramp inside recess 9. Recess 9 has elongated sidewalls 12 that slidingly engage elongated sidewalls 13 of portion 4.
Member 3 surrounds portion 4 of member 2. Sidewalls 12 of member 3 prevent cross ramp movement. Bottom surfaces 11 interlock with bottom surfaces 6 to prevent relative movement of members 2, 3 perpendicularly to the ramp, that is, perpendicularly to the plane of the tank will or top except as occurs by sliding along the ramp.
Other means may be utilized to interlock members 2, 3 to prevent their separation perpendicular to the ramp. Preferred interlocking means, such as shown in
It is important that the walls and top of a semi-membrane tank be thermally isolated from the surrounding support structure and any outer containment structure to prevent heat flow into a chilled tank or out of a hot tank. Conductive heat paths are minimized or, in preferred embodiments, eliminated to the extent possible. For this purpose, support assemblies may be made of insulating material, such as, for example, wood or wood composite material. Member 2, 3 may be fabricated from insulating material. However, portions of members 2, 3, particularly ramping faces 5, 6, 10, 11 may advantageously be metal, such as aluminum, steel or stainless steel. It is essential only that there be insulation blocking the thermal pathway between the tank and the surrounding support structure. Otherwise heat-conducting materials may be used without compromising thermal isolation.
Members 3 can be adapted to secure, in whole or part, insulation panels to tank walls. One such adaptation is shown in
Referring to
We wish to note that the number of support assemblies shown in
The support assembly arrangement shown in
In the curved-plate embodiment shown in
Rather than utilizing the ramp-enclosing sidewalls of member 93 to restrain vertical movement of cusp 98 and force vertical contraction and expansion to be accommodated by changes in the radius of the curved plates (sidewalls of two-dimension assemblies are shown as elements 12 in
Beams 103 prevent cusps 98 from moving vertically with respect to one another, thereby forcing the curved plates in wall 97 to accommodate thermal expansion in the vertical direction. As will be appreciated, this will permit simplification of the ramp-enclosing construction shown in
The series of beams 103 extending along each tank wall also provides a means for lifting the tank wall utilizing a lifting jig. An example of a lifting system is to provide each beam 103 with a hole 107 at its top such that a pipe can be slid through holes 107 on each tank side. The pipe (not shown) preferably comprises a detachable member of a lifting jig, but it could be slidably attached to beams 103. Utilizing the preferred embodiment, the tank, the support assemblies and beams 103 can be constructed and completely assembled outside the support structure. Assembly members 92 can be ramped inwardly toward tank wall 97 to provide installation clearance. The entire assembly can be lowered into the support structure, after which members 92 are ramped into engagement with outer support members 105 and secured thereto, as by welding.
A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, such features as loose fits between interlocking support assembly members, adjustable tilting of sliding surfaces or other means to accommodate manufacturing tolerances or thermal gradients between different locations within a tank, constructing the mating surfaces of the ramps of metal attached to load bearing insulating blocks are all potential variations which are within the possible alternatives that would be readily apparent to a practitioner skilled in the art.
Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US05/06749 | 2/28/2005 | WO | 12/4/2006 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60550550 | Mar 2004 | US |