Performance Evaluation of Submerged Floating Tunnel Subjected to Hydrodynamic and Seismic Excitations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Governing Equations of Motion
2.1. Modeling of Waves and Currents
2.2. Equations of Motion
3. Numerical Example
- The cross-section of the SFT is hollow circular, consisting of an external aluminum layer followed by a sandwiched concrete layer and internal steel layer. The material’s thicknesses and tunnel diameters are shown in Figure 2c. A uniformly-distributed load of 125 kN/m, per unit length, was used for the tunnel. The Archimedes buoyancy was 160 kN/m ( = 1050 × 10 × π × 4.42/4 = 160 kN/m), and the net residual buoyancy was 35 kN/m (160 − 125 = 35 kN/m). A uniformly-distributed live load of 10 kN/m was assumed to be acting on the tunnel;
- The mooring cable connections at the anchor point (seabed) and tunnel were treated as pins; and
- The tunnel displacements were restrained at one end, while the axial displacement was left free at the other end. The flexural rotations were allowed at both ends of the tunnel.
4. Results
4.1. Hydrodynamic Response
4.1.1. Verification of the Numerical Model
4.1.2. Static Response
4.1.3. Dynamic Response
4.2. Seismic Response
5. Conclusions
- The static response can provide a benchmark for decision-making on mooring cable arrangements and configurations for the preliminary design. However, the static analysis underestimates the responses in comparison to those of dynamic analysis
- The SFT moored by tension leg mooring cables was least effective, because of lesser horizontal stiffness, and the SFT moored by such mooring cables undergoes extreme displacements in the transverse direction as compared to the one moored by inclined mooring cables. The SFT moored by a combination of tension legs and single inclined mooring cables was effective for moderate environmental conditions. For severe environmental conditions, the SFT should be moored either by a combination of tension legs and double inclined mooring cables or only by double inclined mooring cables.
- For hydrodynamic analysis, the transient motions of SFT were small and decayed quickly, and the steady-state motions mainly governed the structural response of SFT under the prescribed damping conditions. In the case of the seismic analysis, the transient motions are more pronounced as compared to the hydrodynamic response.
- In the hydrodynamic analysis, the vertical response of SFT was very small and mainly attributed to gravity and hydrodynamic forces; while the transverse response was very large for seismic analysis. The transverse displacements and internal forces were found to be larger than those of the vertical direction, which showed less restraining and lesser mooring cable stiffness in the transverse direction.
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mooring configuration | Section A | Section B | Section C |
---|---|---|---|
Configuration 1 (C1) | |||
Configuration 2 (C2) | |||
Configuration 3 (C3) |
Element | Parameter | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|---|
Tunnel | Tunnel equivalent density | kg/m3 | 2451 |
Elastic modulus | N/m2 | 3 × 1010 | |
Area | m2 | 5.1 | |
Moment of inertia | m4 | 12.3 | |
Length of tunnel | m | 100 | |
Mooring cables | Elastic modulus | N/m2 | 1.4 × 1011 |
Diameter of cable | m | 0.06 | |
Moment of inertia | m4 | 6 × 10−7 | |
Cable density | kg/m3 | 7850 | |
Hydrodynamics | Wave height (H) | m | 1 |
Time period (T) | s | 2.3 | |
Surface current velocity () | m/s | 0.1 | |
Depth of water (h) | m | 30 | |
Distance of SFT from free surface (h1) | m | 2 | |
Density of water (ρw) | kg/m3 | 1050 | |
Drag coefficient (CD) | -- | 1 | |
Inertia coefficient (CM) | -- | 2 |
A | B | C | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 | C2 | C3 | C1 | C2 | C3 | C1 | C2 | C3 | |
(×10−3 rad) | −0.441 | −0.585 | −0.512 | 0.022 | 0.027 | 0.024 | 0.452 | 0.599 | 0.524 |
(×10−3 rad) | 0.312 | 0.196 | 0.134 | −4 × 10−13 | −4.9 × 10−14 | −2.2 × 10−13 | −0.312 | −0.196 | −0.134 |
(×10−2 m) | 1.395 | 0.918 | 0.663 | 1.716 | 1.114 | 0.791 | 1.395 | 0.918 | 0.663 |
(×10−2 m) | 2.264 | 2.766 | 2.511 | 2.684 | 3.360 | 3.016 | 2.198 | 2.685 | 2.437 |
(×103 kN-m) | 10.230 | 11.382 | 10.796 | 10.368 | 17.044 | 13.648 | 8.500 | 9.269 | 8.878 |
(×103 kN-m) | 7.640 | 5.263 | 3.978 | 9.095 | 5.128 | 2.982 | 7.638 | 5.262 | 3.977 |
(×102 kN) | 1.459 | 0.659 | 0.231 | −6.2 × 10−12 | −0.800 | −1.228 | −1.459 | −0.659 | −0.230 |
(×102 kN) | −5.028 | −4.645 | −4.840 | −5.552 | −2.799 | −4.200 | −6.555 | −9.500 | −8.002 |
Mode | C1 | C2 | C3 | Mode | C1 | C2 | C3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 0.5660 | 0.6997 | 0.824 | 11 | 14.0467 | 14.0359 | 14.0408 |
2 | 1.2825 | 1.1542 | 1.2144 | 12 | 20.0309 | 20.0309 | 20.0309 |
3 | 2.2606 | 2.2606 | 2.2606 | 13 | 20.0417 | 20.0417 | 20.0417 |
4 | 2.5041 | 2.5041 | 2.5041 | 14 | 26.2123 | 26.2123 | 26.2123 |
5 | 5.0739 | 5.0907 | 5.1103 | 15 | 27.0944 | 27.0975 | 27.1010 |
6 | 5.1324 | 5.1025 | 5.1160 | 16 | 27.1051 | 27.0996 | 27.1021 |
7 | 8.7454 | 8.7454 | 8.7454 | 17 | 35.1364 | 35.1364 | 35.1364 |
8 | 8.9895 | 8.9895 | 8.9895 | 18 | 35.1522 | 35.1522 | 35.1522 |
9 | 9.0143 | 9.0143 | 9.0143 | 19 | 43.6074 | 43.6074 | 43.6074 |
10 | 13.985 | 13.991 | 13.998 | 20 | 44.1137 | 44.1155 | 44.1176 |
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Muhammad, N.; Ullah, Z.; Choi, D.-H. Performance Evaluation of Submerged Floating Tunnel Subjected to Hydrodynamic and Seismic Excitations. Appl. Sci. 2017, 7, 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/app7111122
Muhammad N, Ullah Z, Choi D-H. Performance Evaluation of Submerged Floating Tunnel Subjected to Hydrodynamic and Seismic Excitations. Applied Sciences. 2017; 7(11):1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/app7111122
Chicago/Turabian StyleMuhammad, Naik, Zahid Ullah, and Dong-Ho Choi. 2017. "Performance Evaluation of Submerged Floating Tunnel Subjected to Hydrodynamic and Seismic Excitations" Applied Sciences 7, no. 11: 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/app7111122
APA StyleMuhammad, N., Ullah, Z., & Choi, D. -H. (2017). Performance Evaluation of Submerged Floating Tunnel Subjected to Hydrodynamic and Seismic Excitations. Applied Sciences, 7(11), 1122. https://doi.org/10.3390/app7111122