Published 2022
| Version v1
Publication
A Review of Ship-to-Ship Interactions in Calm Waters
Description
The hydrodynamic interaction between two or more ships in harbours or inland waterways
is a classical maritime engineering research area. In ship manoeuvring practice, ship masters try to
determine the speed and gap limit when a ship is passing or encountering others, particularly in
confined water ways. This requires an accurate prediction of the interaction force acting on both
ships. The pioneer experimental studies showed that the interaction could lead to a very large yaw
moment and this moment is strongly time-dependent, which could make the ships veer from their
original courses, leading to collisions. Based on the findings on experimental measurements, some
empirical formulas are proposed in the literature to predict such interaction forces. However, these
formulas could provide a satisfactory estimation only when the ship speed is quite high, and the
water depth is shallow and constant. Numerical simulation overcomes this issue by simulating the
ship-to-ship problem by considering the effect of the 3D ship hull, variable water depth and ship
speed. Numerical simulation has now become the most widely adopted method to investigate the
ship-to-ship problem. In the present study, the development of the methodologies of ship-to-ship
problems will be reviewed, and the research gap and challenges will be summarized.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1101855
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1101855
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE