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Exploring the effects of speed and scale on a ship's form factor using CFD

  • Terziev, Momchil (Faculty of Engineering, University of Strathclyde) ;
  • Tezdogan, Tahsin (Department of Naval Architecture, Ocean and Marine Engineering, University of Strathclyde) ;
  • Demirel, Yigit Kemal (Department of Naval Architecture, Ocean and Marine Engineering, University of Strathclyde) ;
  • Villa, Diego (Department of Electric, Electronic and Telecommunication Engineering and Naval Architecture (DITEN), University of Genoa) ;
  • Mizzi, Simon (Faculty of Engineering, University of Malta) ;
  • Incecik, Atilla (Faculty of Engineering, University of Strathclyde)
  • Received : 2020.09.17
  • Accepted : 2020.12.07
  • Published : 2021.11.30

Abstract

The problem of predicting a ship's form factor and associated scale effects has been subject to many investigations in recent years. In this study, an attempt is made to investigate whether the form factor is influenced by a change in the ship's speed by numerically modelling a geosim series of the KCS hull form by means of a RANS solver. The turbulence dependence of the problem is also studied by altering the closure model among three widely used approaches (the k-𝜔, k-𝜔 SST, and k-𝜀 models). The results show that at very low speeds (Froude numbers in the range of 0.02-0.06) the numerical model predicts changes in the form factor of a ship between 10% and 20%, depending on the turbulence model and scale factor choices. As the speed is increased further, the form factor exhibits little change, usually in the range of 1% or less. Simulations where the Reynolds number is changed by approximately two orders of magnitude, achieved by altering the value of viscosity, confirmed that the form factor can be considered Froude-dependent only for low speeds, predicting essentially identical values when high speed cases are considered.

Keywords

Acknowledgement

Results were obtained using the ARCHIE-WeSt High-Performance Computer (www.archie-west.ac.uk) based at the University of Strathclyde. The authors gratefully acknowledge that the research presented in this paper was carried out as part of the EU funded H2020 project, VENTuRE (grant no. 856887). The authors are grateful for the EPSRC support for the project on 'Shipping in Changing Climates' (EPSRC Grant No. EP/K039253/1) which enabled them to carry out the research reported in this paper. The underlying data in this paper is openly available from the University of Strathclyde data repository at: https://doi.org/10.15129/177ff072-cd23-4762-9492-2f495a4879d3.

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