Wave motion in a narrow gap coupling with the roll motion of a vessel next to an offshore terminal
Concerning the scenario of a vessel operating alongside an offshore terminal, the vessel being the floating body and the offshore terminal bottom-mounted. The closeness of the two bodies leads to the formation of a long narrow gap, within which the large amplification of the water-surface elevation...
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Published in | Ocean engineering Vol. 293; p. 116646 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier Ltd
01.02.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Concerning the scenario of a vessel operating alongside an offshore terminal, the vessel being the floating body and the offshore terminal bottom-mounted. The closeness of the two bodies leads to the formation of a long narrow gap, within which the large amplification of the water-surface elevation could occur. The coupling effect between the roll motion of the vessel and the water-surface motion within the gap is primarily concerned. Under the assumption that the quay wall of the terminal is infinitely long and fully reflective, the imaging principle and a modified Green's function have been developed to investigate such an effect. Numerical models are developed based on the two proposed approaches, respectively, in conjunction with a higher-order boundary element method. For a small gap width, the p = 1 resonant mode of water-surface motion in the gap can apparently enhance the roll motion of the vessel. The radiation wave owing to the enhanced roll motion can in turn disturb the water-surface motion, increasing the frequency of the dominant peak while decreasing its amplitude. As the gap width increases, the water-surface elevation around the resonant frequency of roll motion gets more and more noticeable, gradually becoming the dominant peak. The effect of the mooring stiffness is also discussed, revealing the existence of a ꞌnon-resonance regionꞌ where no resonance occurs in this specific frequency region. It is also noted that the resonant water-surface motion of p = 1 mode can cause a remarkable amplification of the negative horizontal mean wave drift force, pushing the vessel away from the terminal.
•This work focused on the interaction between the roll motion and the water-surface motion with a vessel alongside an offshore terminal.•Three-dimensional numerical models were developed based on the imaging principle and the use of a modified Green's function, respectively, in conjunction with a higher-order boundary element method.•The roll motion of the vessel exhibits two peak responses in the presence of the adjacent vertical wall.•Subject to the effect of roll motion, the p = 1 resonant mode of water-surface motion experiences an increase in frequency and a decrease in amplitude.•A region known as the ꞌnon-resonance regionꞌ was found, where no resonance occurs in this specific frequency region regardless of the mooring stiffness. |
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ISSN: | 0029-8018 1873-5258 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2023.116646 |