{"title":"Depth Control Modelling and Analysis of a Subsea Shuttle Tanker","authors":"Yucong Ma, D. Sui, Y. Xing, M. Ong, T. Hemmingsen","doi":"10.1115/omae2021-61827","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n A novel subsea shuttle tanker (SST) concept was recently proposed as a cost-effective alternative to subsea pipelines and tanker ships for liquid CO2 transportation between a source facility and a subsea well. It is envisioned that the SST will be deployed to transport CO2 to marginal subsea fields with an annual CO2 storage capacity less than 1 million metric tons; volumes that do not justify a full subsea field development. The SST is designed to be a fully autonomous underwater vessel with a cargo capacity of over 17,000 metric tons. It is 155 m long and it has a 17 m diameter hull. The vessel may operate at a water depth of between 50 to 200 m in a weather-independent environment. Furthermore, it travels at a slow speed for minimal energy consumption and maximal range. During the offloading process, the SST will approach the subsea well and land on the seabed just outside the safety radius of the well. After that, a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) will mate the offloading flowline to the SST, and the offloading process will start. The landing sequence is technically challenging for various reasons and warrants detailed analysis. First, the SST would have limited manoeuvrability due to the large inertia of the vessel and low effectiveness of the hydroplanes to provide steering at low speeds. Second, during the final phase before the SST lands, seabed boundary effects will intensify and lead to increased non-uniform, time-varying and drag-dominated load-effects. Third, the impact forces during landing should be minimised to allow for the lowest design load. Solving these technical challenges is crucial to meet SST’s design goals of having the least possible control appendices for maximum efficiency/range, and minimal structural weight for the largest cargo capacity. This paper will describe the development of a fully coupled 2D planar model that considers the most relevant load-effects. This model is developed with the feasibility to implement any control schemes and has the potential to plug observers or control modules in future study. This paper performs open loop test and applies simple control cases to explore the depth control in landing sequence. A feed-forward heading control method that achieves the fastest control response and best path following ability is then proposed based on the results obtained.","PeriodicalId":269406,"journal":{"name":"Volume 5: Ocean Space Utilization","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Volume 5: Ocean Space Utilization","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1115/omae2021-61827","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
Abstract
A novel subsea shuttle tanker (SST) concept was recently proposed as a cost-effective alternative to subsea pipelines and tanker ships for liquid CO2 transportation between a source facility and a subsea well. It is envisioned that the SST will be deployed to transport CO2 to marginal subsea fields with an annual CO2 storage capacity less than 1 million metric tons; volumes that do not justify a full subsea field development. The SST is designed to be a fully autonomous underwater vessel with a cargo capacity of over 17,000 metric tons. It is 155 m long and it has a 17 m diameter hull. The vessel may operate at a water depth of between 50 to 200 m in a weather-independent environment. Furthermore, it travels at a slow speed for minimal energy consumption and maximal range. During the offloading process, the SST will approach the subsea well and land on the seabed just outside the safety radius of the well. After that, a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) will mate the offloading flowline to the SST, and the offloading process will start. The landing sequence is technically challenging for various reasons and warrants detailed analysis. First, the SST would have limited manoeuvrability due to the large inertia of the vessel and low effectiveness of the hydroplanes to provide steering at low speeds. Second, during the final phase before the SST lands, seabed boundary effects will intensify and lead to increased non-uniform, time-varying and drag-dominated load-effects. Third, the impact forces during landing should be minimised to allow for the lowest design load. Solving these technical challenges is crucial to meet SST’s design goals of having the least possible control appendices for maximum efficiency/range, and minimal structural weight for the largest cargo capacity. This paper will describe the development of a fully coupled 2D planar model that considers the most relevant load-effects. This model is developed with the feasibility to implement any control schemes and has the potential to plug observers or control modules in future study. This paper performs open loop test and applies simple control cases to explore the depth control in landing sequence. A feed-forward heading control method that achieves the fastest control response and best path following ability is then proposed based on the results obtained.