A Comparative Study to Estimate Fuel Consumption: A Simplified Physical Approach against a Data-Driven Model

Author:

La Ferlita Alessandro1,Qi Yan1,Di Nardo Emanuel2ORCID,el Moctar Ould1ORCID,Schellin Thomas E.1ORCID,Ciaramella Angelo2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ship Technology, Ocean Engineering and Transport Systems, Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, University of Duisburg-Essen, 47057 Duisburg, Germany

2. Department of Science and Technology, University of Naples Parthenope, 80133 Naples, Italy

Abstract

Two methods were compared to predict a ship’s fuel consumption: the simplified naval architecture method (SNAM) and the deep neural network (DNN) method. The SNAM relied on limited operational data and employed a simplified technique to estimate a ship’s required power by determining its resistance in calm water. Here, the Holtrop–Mennen technique obtained hydrostatic information for each selected voyage, the added resistance in the encountered natural seaways, and the brake power required for each scenario. Additional characteristics, such as efficiency factors, were derived from literature surveys and from assumed working hypotheses. The DNN method comprised multiple fully connected layers with the nonlinear activation function rectified linear unit (ReLU). This machine-learning-based method was trained on more than 12,000 sample voyages, and the tested data were validated against realistic operational data. Our results demonstrated that, for some ship topologies (general cargo and containerships), the physical models predicted more accurately the realistic data than the machine learning approach despite the lack of relevant operational parameters. Nevertheless, the DNN method was generally capable of yielding reasonably accurate predictions of fuel consumption for oil tankers, bulk carriers, and RoRo ships.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference44 articles.

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