Container Ship: Diego Cerezo San Frutos Andrés Serena Gómez
Container Ship: Diego Cerezo San Frutos Andrés Serena Gómez
Container Ship: Diego Cerezo San Frutos Andrés Serena Gómez
Container Ship
Loads suffered by the cargo .......................................................................................................... 6 Static loads .................................................................................................................... 6 Dynamic loads. .............................................................................................................. 6 Yawing loads .................................................................................................................. 6 Vertical oscillations ....................................................................................................... 6 Linear movements beyond longitudinal and transversal axes...................................... 7 Lateral movements ....................................................................................................... 7 Pitching .......................................................................................................................... 7
Structural Analysis of Container Ships .......................................................................................... 8 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Hull girder strength including torsion strength ............................................................. 8 Local strength plating and ordinary stiffeners .............................................................. 9 Transverse primary members, stringers, floors, girders ............................................... 9 Structural continuity ..................................................................................................... 9 Fatigue ........................................................................................................................... 9
How to load containers ships ........................................................................................................ 9 Discussion about the future trends and development for container ships10
References ...................................................................................................................... 11
Type
Box ship: most common type of container ship, the containers are loaded from the outside with special cranes.
Picture
"LOLO" Lift-On/Lift-Off: the containers are firstly placed on a barge or other cargo ship and by a lift or crane displaced to the container ship
Name
Ultra large container vessel
TEU
Picture
14,501
366
49
15,2
New panamax
10-14,5
366
49
15,2
Post panamax
5,10110,0
366
49
15,5
Panamax
3,001-5,1
294,13
32,31
12,04
Feedermax
2,001-3,0
TEU
1,001-2,0
Picture
Small feeder
Up to 1,0
Type of load
Figure
Figure
Linear movements beyond longitudinal and transversal axes: the ship is accelerated or
decelerated to prow and stern, and from one band to another. These loads can produce important torsion loads.
Lateral
movements: movement of the ship around its longitudinal axe. Can produce angles from the horizontal normally from 10 to 30 but can raise to 45. 10 Pitching: movements of the
ship around its transversal axe. In this movement the ship is picked up from the prow and picked down from the stern and vice versa. 30
45
The total loads suffered by a container ship can be summed up with this figure:
Figure 2. Hogging and Sagging In order to study the strength of the vessel, it is necessary to distinguish different loads situation and the behaviour of specific parts of the vessel. The study must be done focusing on these parts: 1. Hull girder strength including torsion strength: The check is done in order to know the hull girder bending stress, shear stress and warping stress. Figure 3 shows the deformation and hull girder stress of a large container ship.
Figure 3. Deformation and hull girder stress. Diego Cerezo San Frutos Andrs Serena Gmez
2. Local strength plating and ordinary stiffeners: The results of this study are: thickness of plating, shear area and section modulus of stiffeners, dimensions and scantlings of brackets, buckling. 3. Transverse primary members, stringers, floors, girders: The aim is check yielding and buckling. 4. Structural continuity: Is useful to provide information to make possible modifications of connections design. 5. Fatigue: Allows knowing the damage ratio or fatigue life of connections. One of the most important parts is the behaviour against fatigue of the vessel due to water and wave loads. These are every moment changing so the ship is continuously subjected to variable loads. That is, a huge number of cycles load. So the weld design of the plates must avoid fatigue failure; otherwise the integrity of the ship structure could be in danger. The assessment must be done in the following details: Hatch corners. Connection of side longitudinal stiffeners with stiffeners of transverse primary supporting members.
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Box ship: http://flotilla19.d11nr.info/Images/BayPatrol/Loading.jpg RORO: http://www.arabnews.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/galleryformatter_slide/Cont ainer-vessel_0.jpg LOLO: http://www.workboatsinternational.com/images/STLS1412.jpg Panamax: http://img.nauticexpo.es/images_ne/photo-g/buque-de-carga-buqueportacontenedor-panamax-astillero-naval-31084-376325.jpg
New panama: http://seeker401.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/panamax20ice20412201600x.jpg Ultra large container vessel: http://marineinsight.com/wpcontent/uploads/2011/03/ultra-large-container-ship.jpg Post panama: http://www.capital.com.pa/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/page34.jpg Federmax: http://www.uktrainsim.com/filelib-info.php?form_fileid=26643 Feeder: http://ports.co.za/news/article_2009_08_26_4300.html Small feeder: http://www.ibiblio.org/maritime/Newspaper/thumbnails.php?album=12842 Diego Cerezo San Frutos Andrs Serena Gmez
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