Naval architecture
{{Short description|Engineering discipline of marine vessels}}
{{Redirect|Naval engineering|the physical construction of ships and other floating vessels|Shipbuilding|the design of shipboard systems, and the engineering of other ocean systems and structures|Marine engineering}}
File:Scot8000 Querschnitt.jpg of a tanker ship]]
File:Naval Architecture Course of Study.png
Naval architecture, or naval engineering, is an engineering discipline incorporating elements of mechanical, electrical, electronic, software and safety engineering as applied to the engineering design process, shipbuilding, maintenance, and operation of marine vessels and structures.{{Cite web|url=https://www.rina.org.uk/careers_in_naval_architecture.html|title=Careers in Naval Architecture|website=www.rina.org.uk|access-date=2019-08-13|archive-date=2017-10-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171020170147/https://www.rina.org.uk/careers_in_naval_architecture.html|url-status=dead}}Biran, Adrian; (2003). Ship hydrostatics and stability (1st Ed.) – Butterworth-Heinemann. {{ISBN|0-7506-4988-7}} Naval architecture involves basic and applied research, design, development, design evaluation (classification) and calculations during all stages of the life of a marine vehicle. Preliminary design of the vessel, its detailed design, construction, trials, operation and maintenance, launching and dry-docking are the main activities involved. Ship design calculations are also required for ships being modified (by means of conversion, rebuilding, modernization, or repair). Naval architecture also involves formulation of safety regulations and damage-control rules and the approval and certification of ship designs to meet statutory and non-statutory requirements.
Main subjects
{{See also|Computational fluid dynamics}}
The word "vessel" includes every description of watercraft, mainly ships and boats, but also including non-displacement craft, WIG craft and seaplanes, used or capable of being used as a means of transportation on water.Convention On The International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea, 1972, As Amended; International Maritime Organization; {{ISBN|92-801-4167-8}} The principal elements of naval architecture are detailed in the following sections.Lewis V, Edward (Ed.); (June 1989). Principles of Naval Architecture (2nd Rev.) Vol. 1 – Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers. {{ISBN|0-939773-00-7}}
=Hydrostatics=
Hydrostatics concerns the conditions to which the vessel is subjected while at rest in water and to its ability to remain afloat. This involves computing buoyancy, displacement, and other hydrostatic properties such as trim (the measure of the longitudinal inclination of the vessel) and stability (the ability of a vessel to restore itself to an upright position after being inclined by wind, sea, or loading conditions).{{Cite web|url=https://www.usna.edu/NAOE/academics/en342.php|title=EN342|website=www.usna.edu}}
=Hydrodynamics=
- Hydrodynamics concerns the flow of water around the ship's hull, bow, and stern, and over bodies such as propeller blades or rudder, or through thruster tunnels.
- Ship resistance and propulsion concern resistance towards motion in water primarily caused due to flow of water around the hull. Powering calculation is done based on this.
- Propulsion is used to move the vessel through water using propellers, thrusters, water jets, sails etc. Engine types are mainly internal combustion. Some vessels are electrically powered using nuclear or solar energy.
- Ship motions involves motions of the vessel in seaway and its responses in waves and wind.{{Cite web|url=https://www.usna.edu/NAOE/academics/en455.php|title=United States Naval Academy Seakeeping and Maneuvering Course Notes by C.Q. Judge and A. Ibrahim|website=www.usna.edu}}
- Controllability (maneuvering) involves controlling and maintaining position and direction of the vessel.
= Flotation and stability =
{{main|ship motions|ship stability|initial stability|secondary stability|limit of positive stability}}
While atop a liquid surface a floating body has 6 degrees of freedom in its movements, these are categorized in either translation or rotation.
- Translation
- Sway: transverse
- Surge: fore and aft
- Heave: vertical
- Rotation
- Yaw: about a vertical axis
- Pitch or trim: about a transverse axis
- Roll or heel: about a fore and aft axis
Longitudinal stability for longitudinal inclinations, the stability depends upon the distance between the center of gravity and the longitudinal meta-center. In other words, the basis in which the ship maintains its center of gravity is its distance set equally apart from both the aft and forward section of the ship.
While a body floats on a liquid surface it still encounters the force of gravity pushing down on it. In order to stay afloat and avoid sinking there is an opposed force acting against the body known as the hydrostatic pressures. The forces acting on the body must be of the same magnitude and same line of motion in order to maintain the body at equilibrium. This description of equilibrium is only present when a freely floating body is in still water, when other conditions are present the magnitude of which these forces shifts drastically creating the swaying motion of the body.{{Cite book|title=Introduction to Naval Architecture|last=Tupper|first=Eric|publisher=Butterworth-Heinemann|year=1996|location=Oxford, England}}
The buoyancy force is equal to the weight of the body, in other words, the mass of the body is equal to the mass of the water displaced by the body. This adds an upward force to the body by the amount of surface area times the area displaced in order to create an equilibrium between the surface of the body and the surface of the water.
The stability of a ship under most conditions is able to overcome any form or restriction or resistance encountered in rough seas; however, ships have undesirable roll characteristics when the balance of oscillations in roll is two times that of oscillations in heave, thus causing the ship to capsize.{{Cite journal|last=Neves|first=M. A. S.|date=2016|title=Dynamic stability of ships in regular and irregular seas - An Overview|journal=Ocean Engineering|volume=120|pages=362–370|doi=10.1016/j.oceaneng.2016.02.010|bibcode=2016OcEng.120..362N }}
=Structures=
{{See also|Superstructure|Hull (watercraft)|l2=Hull design|Shell plating}}
File:Diagram of US Navy WWII destroyer escort.png
Image:Plate Strakes.PNG drawing of the various shell plating on a convention hull.]]
Structures involves selection of material of construction, structural analysis of global and local strength of the vessel, vibration of the structural components and structural responses of the vessel during motions in seaway. Depending on type of ship, the structure and design will vary in what material to use as well as how much of it. Some ships are made from glass reinforced plastics but the vast majority are steel with possibly some aluminium in the superstructure.
The complete structure of the ship is designed with panels shaped in a rectangular form consisting of steel plating supported on four edges. Combined in a large surface area the Grillages create the hull of the ship, deck, and bulkheads while still providing mutual support of the frames. Though the structure of the ship is sturdy enough to hold itself together the main force it has to overcome is longitudinal bending creating a strain against its hull, its structure must be designed so that the material is disposed as much forward and aft as possible.
The principal longitudinal elements are the deck, shell plating, inner bottom all of which are in the form of grillages, and additional longitudinal stretching to these. The dimensions of the ship are in order to create enough spacing between the stiffeners in prevention of buckling. Warships have used a longitudinal system of stiffening that many modern commercial vessels have adopted. This system was widely used in early merchant ships such as the SS Great Eastern, but later shifted to transversely framed structure another concept in ship hull design that proved more practical. This system was later implemented on modern vessels such as tankers because of its popularity and was then named the Isherwood System.
The arrangement of the Isherwood system consists of stiffening decks both side and bottom by longitudinal members, they are separated enough so they have the same distance between them as the frames and beams. This system works by spacing out the transverse members that support the longitudinal by about 3 or 4 meters, with the wide spacing this causes the traverse strength needed by displacing the amount of force the bulkheads provide.
=Arrangements=
File:Spruance class destroyer functional areas as planned in 1970.png
Arrangements involves concept design, layout and access, fire protection, allocation of spaces, ergonomics and capacity.
=Construction=
File:The bow of 'Naess Crusader' nears completion (24461836489).jpg
Construction depends on the material used. When steel or aluminium is used this involves welding of the plates and profiles after rolling, marking, cutting and bending as per the structural design drawings or models, followed by erection and launching. Other joining techniques are used for other materials like fibre reinforced plastic and glass-reinforced plastic. The process of construction is thought-out cautiously while considering all factors like safety, strength of structure, hydrodynamics, and ship arrangement. Each factor considered presents a new option for materials to consider as well as ship orientation. When the strength of the structure is considered the acts of ship collision are considered in the way that the ships structure is altered. Therefore, the properties of materials are considered carefully as applied material on the struck ship has elastic properties, the energy absorbed by the ship being struck is then deflected in the opposite direction, so both ships go through the process of rebounding to prevent further damage.{{Cite journal|last=Prabowo|first=A. R.|date=2017|title=Effects of the rebounding of a striking ship on structural crashworthiness during ship-ship collision|journal=Thin-Walled Structures|volume=115|pages=225–239|doi=10.1016/j.tws.2017.02.022|doi-access=free}}
Science and craft
File:Ship lines (3D design).PNG
Traditionally, naval architecture has been more craft than science. The suitability of a vessel's shape was judged by looking at a half-model of a vessel or a prototype. Ungainly shapes or abrupt transitions were frowned on as being flawed. This included rigging, deck arrangements, and even fixtures. Subjective descriptors such as ungainly, full, and fine were used as a substitute for the more precise terms used today. A vessel was, and still is described as having a ‘fair’ shape. The term ‘fair’ is meant to denote not only a smooth transition from fore to aft but also a shape that was ‘right.’ Determining what is ‘right’ in a particular situation in the absence of definitive supporting analysis encompasses the art of naval architecture to this day.
Modern low-cost digital computers and dedicated software, combined with extensive research to correlate full-scale, towing tank and computational data, have enabled naval architects to more accurately predict the performance of a marine vehicle. These tools are used for static stability (intact and damaged), dynamic stability, resistance, powering, hull development, structural analysis, green water modelling, and slamming analysis. Data are regularly shared in international conferences sponsored by RINA, Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers (SNAME) and others. Computational Fluid Dynamics is being applied to predict the response of a floating body in a random sea.
See also
{{Portal|Architecture}}
{{div col}}
- {{annotated link|Autonomous cargo ship}}
- {{annotated link|Bulkhead (partition)}}
- {{annotated link|Collier (ship)}}
- {{annotated link|Coastal engineering}}
- {{annotated link|Engine officer}}
- {{annotated link|Hull (watercraft)}}
- {{annotated link|Hydraulic engineering}}
- {{annotated link|Hydrodynamics}}
- {{annotated link|Hydrostatics}}
- {{annotated link|International Maritime Organization}}
- {{annotated link|List of maritime colleges}}
- {{annotated link|Longitudinal framing}}
- {{annotated link|Marine architecture}}
- {{annotated link|Marine engineering}}
- {{annotated link|Marine propulsion}}
- {{annotated link|Naval ship}}
- {{annotated link|Ocean engineering}}
- {{annotated link|Offshore construction}}
- {{annotated link|Royal Institution of Naval Architects}}
- {{annotated link|Seakeeping}}
- {{annotated link|Seaworthiness}}
- {{annotated link|Shipbuilding}}
- {{annotated link|Ship classification society}}
- {{annotated link|Ship motions}}
- {{annotated link|Ship stability}}
- {{annotated link|Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers}}
{{div col end}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |last=Ferreiro |first=Larrie D. |date=2007 |title=Ships and Science: The Birth of Naval Architecture in the Scientific Revolution, 1600–1800 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=978-0-262-06259-6}}
- {{cite book |last=Ferreiro |first=Larrie D. |date=2020 |title=Bridging the Seas: The Rise of Naval Architecture in the Industrial Age, 1800–2000 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=978-0-262-53807-7}}
- Paasch, H. Dictionary of Naval Terms, from Keel to Truck. London: G. Philip & Son, 1908.
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