首页|Prediction of the extreme slow-drift response of moored floating structures using design waves
Prediction of the extreme slow-drift response of moored floating structures using design waves
扫码查看
点击上方二维码区域,可以放大扫码查看
原文链接
NETL
NSTL
Elsevier
Design waves have been used in the past for the probabilistic assessment of wave-induced loads and responses of offshore structures. Various response-conditioning techniques have been employed to determine suitable wave episodes, typically based on linear response transfer functions. Nevertheless, extreme events are not always driven by linear phenomena but can be triggered by near-resonant effects, as in the case of the slow-drift motions of moored floating bodies. Limited research has been devoted to addressing this class of responses using response-conditioned waves (RCW). This paper presents a new approach for deriving RCWs that accounts for combined wave-and low-frequency responses. Both the response amplitude operator (RAO) and the quadratic transfer function (QTF) are employed in an iterative response-conditioning procedure. That permits the identification of appropriate short-duration wave episodes that excite resonant slow-drift motions. These wave episodes are then used in a two-step multi-fidelity design wave methodology for the probabilistic evaluation of the fully nonlinear extreme responses. The proposed approach is validated experimentally for predicting the surge excursions of a moored container ship, and good agreement is found against Monte Carlo results in irregular waves.