Numerical Study on the Effect of Column Boot Diameter-to-Height Ratio on the Hydrodynamic Performance of Deep-Draft Cylindrical Offshore Platforms
Abstrak
For deep-draft cylindrical platforms with a large annular column boot, the influence of the column boot diameter-to-height ratio (d/h) on motion performance remains unclear. This study investigates the effect of d/h on platform hydrodynamics while keeping the main body geometry, displacement, and draft unchanged. A hybrid numerical model validated against tests is adopted: STAR-CCM+ free-decay simulations identify equivalent linear damping, and ANSYS AQWA predicts hydrodynamic coefficients, response amplitude operators, and coupled time-domain responses under a 100-year survival sea state in the western South China Sea. Increasing d/h substantially increases heave added mass and added pitch moment of inertia, leading to longer natural periods and higher damping in heave and pitch. However, its effect on motion responses is non-monotonic and strongly response-dependent. As d/h increases, the responses are initially reduced markedly. The minimum surge and heave responses occur at d/h = 2.39 and 4.67, with reductions of about 34.0% and 87.2%, respectively, while the pitch response is already reduced by about 67.3% at d/h = 7.22. Further increases in d/h may weaken surge and heave mitigation while providing limited additional benefit for pitch. These findings provide qualitative understanding and quantitative guidance for response-oriented column boot design and optimization of similar platforms.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (4)
Chengming Qin
Zhe Chen
Yanping He
Yadong Liu
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2026
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/jmse14060584
- Akses
- Open Access ✓