Abstract
To investigate the flow field characteristics of full-scale ships advancing through confined waters, the international standard container ship (KRISO Container Ship) was considered as a research object in this study. Using the RANS equation, the volume of fluid method and the body force method were selected to investigate the hydrodynamic characteristics of a model-scale ship (the model-scale ratio λ=31.6) and a full-scale ship advancing through confined waters at low speed. A virtual disk was used in the full-scale model to determine the influence of the propeller on the ship’s flow field. First, the feasibility of the numerical calculations was verified. This proves the feasibility of the numerical and grid division methods. The self-propulsion point of the full-scale ship at Fr=0.108 is determined. The calculation cases of model-scale and full-scale ships (with or without virtual disks) at different water depths and distances between the ship and the shore were calculated, and the changes in the hull surface pressure, the flow field around the ship, and the wake fraction near the ship propeller disk in different calculation cases were determined and compared. The variations in the surge force, sway force, and yaw moment between the model- scale and full-scale ships were generally consistent. In very shallow water (H/T=1.3), the non-dimensional force and moment coefficients for model-scale ships increase more rapidly with decreasing distance from shore, suggesting that using model-scale ships to investigate the wall effect in very shallow water will result in predictions that are biased towards safety. By comparing full-scale ships with and without propellers, it was discovered that the surge force, sway force, and yaw moment were marginally greater in the propeller-equipped ship due to the suction effect, and the accompanying flow before and after the propeller was slightly smaller, with less asymmetry.
Publisher
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Univ. of Zagreb
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Ocean Engineering