Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and
Transcription
Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and
Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Kees van Zandwijk, Radboud van Dijk, Eelco Harmsen, Heerema Marine Contractors SE ABSTRACT Deepwater lowering has seen a rapid development over the past 20 years. From the first foundation piles of Tension Leg Platforms in 1000m water depth, via the installation of heavy anchor piles in 2000 to 3000m of water, the industry is now at the brink of lowering heavy and sizable subsea production units into deep and ultra-deep water. When investing in deep water lowering equipment, the discussion circles around the choice for steel wires or fiber ropes. These two cannot easily be exchanged with the aim to test the new technology of fiber ropes or to simply use the best of both in the given situation. As steel wires and fiber ropes require totally different systems that mutually exclude each other, the choice has the nature of an either-or decision. This either-or decision is further complicated by the fact that the dynamic behavior of deepwater lowering systems strongly depends on the vessel from which it is operated; on the water depths in which it is deployed; and on the wave climate in which the operation takes place. Moreover, small and slender structures behave totally differently as compared to large and heavy ones when lowered to the seabed. Figure 1 – Balder, Aegir and OSV compared in the deepwater lowering case study For the case study of this paper, three different vessels as shown in Figure 1 are compared on the installation of a suction pile. The installation of suction piles often involves a multiple weeks installation program, making operability an important issue. The paper compares the IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 1 of 19 performance of the semisubmersible Deepwater Construction Vessel Balder with that of the monohull Deepwater Construction Vessel Aegir and an Offshore Support Vessel when installing suction piles. For each vessel, both the use of steel wires and fiber ropes are compared at various water depths and in different wave regimes. It is illustrated that deepwater construction crane vessels perform very well using steel wires, sometimes with the addition of an elastic stretcher or Passive Heave Compensation in the rigging arrangement. Offshore Support Vessels definitely need fiber ropes and Active Heave Compensation for an acceptable operability. ABBREVIATIONS AHC CTCU DAF DCV DWL FPSO OSV RAO TLP Active Heave Compensator Cable Traction Control Unit Dynamic Amplification Factor Deepwater Construction Vessel Deepwater Lowering Floating Production, Storage and Offloading unit Offshore Support Vessel Response Amplitude Operator Tension Leg Platform INTRODUCTION Modern field development technology demands an increasing amount of hardware on the seabed, not only the usual wellheads, pipelines and manifolds, but also more and more units of subsea production equipment. This is expected to be only the beginning of a trend: in the years to come, deepwater is expected to deliver an ever growing share of offshore oil and gas. In addition, technology is under development to place more and more elements of the traditional topsides on the sea floor, the end goal being a subsea factory on the seabed by 2020 (Ref. 1). When considering investments in new deepwater construction equipment, one of the inevitable questions is what type of DWL system should be chosen: based on steel wires or fiber ropes. Steel wires are relatively cheap, rugged, mechanically transparent and reliable. In the past, payloads worth hundreds billions of dollars have been safely lifted and installed both above and under water, without major mishaps. The only reason not to use steel wires for DWL is in their heavy weight, resulting in a decreasing effectiveness when going into very deep water. The alternative then is fiber ropes with a specific weight close to that of water. Fiber ropes, however, are expensive and more vulnerable in the offshore installation environment. There is a wide variety in brands and associated mechanical properties, requiring substantial physical and chemical knowledge to judge the material and to choose the right wire for an investment. With respect to reliability: the track record of fiber ropes is short. However, recently a number of IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 2 of 19 extensive Joint Industry Programs have been run, which have greatly enhanced the trust in fiber ropes and associated winch systems. It is not only the weight of the wire which governs the decision between steel wires and fiber ropes. Other factors are: the complementary use of the DWL system for non-deepwater applications; the available space on the vessel; the dynamic response of the entire assembly of vessel and DWL system; and the offshore location at which the system is going to be deployed. Heerema has experience with a wide variety of installation vessels and DWL work all over the world. It recently went through an evaluation process of new DWL investments. The paper aims at sharing some of the considerations that came to the table during this process. DEVELOPMENT OF THE DEEPWATER LOWERING MARKET In the context of this paper, „deepwater‟ is defined as a water depth over 1000m and „DWL‟ as the installation of structures on or in the seabed. Pipelines and in-line structures installed with the pipeline are excluded from this definition. With these definitions as a reference, we see the first DWL projects coming up in the early 90s, in the form of a series of TLPs in the Gulf of Mexico. The DWL scope of those first projects consisted of the installation of the TLP foundation piles. This work was typically carried out by crane vessels needed for handling the long foundation piles (typically over 100m long) and driving them into the seabed. The main hoist was used for DWL: by nature this hoist has a lot of wire length in a dense reeving; this wire was reeved out to a reduced number of parts (i.e. wires in the bundle) with just enough capacity for handling the piles and hammer. Figure 2 illustrates the principle. With a reduced number of parts, high-capacity crane vessels could just reach the seabed with their „natural‟ amount of wire, without the need for additional investments. 12-parts reeving 6-parts reeving 4-parts reeving h 2h 3h Twire Wire length = 12 x h Capacity = 12 x Twire Twire Wire length = 6 x 2h = 12 x h Capacity = 6 x Twire Twire Wire length = 4 x 3h = 12 x h Capacity = 4 x Twire Figure 2 – Reaching deeper at less capacity using the same wire length IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 3 of 19 Between 1995 and 2005, the depth of deepwater field developments grew to 2000m. TLPs were technically no longer possible and anchored production facilities were introduced, such as Spars, semis and FPSOs. These structures were moored to anchor piles in the seabed, typically suction piles. At water depths between 1500 and 2000m, re-reeved main hoist systems did no longer suffice. Firstly, because the larger water depth required to further reduce the number of parts for reaching the seabed with the installed wire length and the reduced number of parts resulted in a further reduction of capacity. Secondly, because a substantial amount of the hoisting capacity was lost due to the steel wires having to support their own weight. Figure 3 illustrates the decay of effectiveness of a steel wire hoisting system with depth due to the wire weight. For meeting the capacity requirements at the increased water depths, new DWL units had to be built, in those days all using steel wires, as there was no alternative. Some of these units were integrated in the crane, others were built as a separate unit operated from the deck of the installation vessel. Effectiveness [%] 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 -1000 Water depth [m] -2000 -3000 -4000 Figure 3 – Effectiveness of steel wires versus depth In the same period, the ineffectiveness of steel wires in deepwater triggered the development of a technical alternative using fiber ropes. The specific weight of fiber rope is close to that of water, making them about neutrally buoyant when used under water and almost 100% effective in a DWL system, irrespective of the water depth. A number of serious hurdles had to be overcome: Around the year 2000, fiber ropes were immature for offshore application. Many different types were under development, but offshore use was hampered either by low strength, low stiffness, low critical temperature, creep or sensitivity for abrasion. Fiber ropes could not be used on conventional drum winches as the severe lateral contraction of the rope due to the high Poisson‟s ratio made the rope on the outer layers to creep between the wraps of underlying layers, causing high wear and tear of the ropes during hauling and veering. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 4 of 19 Fiber ropes could not be used on conventional traction winches with drum type sheaves, as in use for steel wires. The high elongation of fiber rope caused it to slip over the sheaves, rapidly heating it up above its critical temperature with associated loss of strength. Shortly after 2000, a series of Joint Industry Programs was initiated in order to address these problem areas. These programs resulted in the development of fiber ropes that combined „best of brand‟ properties by mixing fibers of different suppliers. In parallel, a CTCU traction winch system was developed using individually driven sheaves with the purpose of accommodating the extensive elongation of fiber ropes and minimizing the slippage between rope and sheave. The system was successfully taken into commercial use in 2006 (Ref. 2). The CTCU system is complex in its controls and patent filings show several attempts to develop a simpler concept for fiber rope DWL, on the basis of either drum winches or traction winches. However, so far none of these attempts has beaten the CTCU. The development of fiber rope DWL technology meant a substantial reduction of wire and equipment weight and opened up the DWL market for installation vessels smaller than the conventional crane vessels. In addition it enabled DWL at almost infinite water depth as the wire weight as such was no longer a limiting factor. The last step in deepwater production technology was made around 2005 with the maturing of subsea production systems. Gradually, substantial parts of the traditional topsides are placed on the seabed. This technology is boosted by savings on the platform infrastructure, on vertical riser systems and enhanced hydrocarbons recovery rates. Subsea production units must be serviceable by OSVs with DWL capacities up to 400t, suggesting that the most logic way of installation is by the same OSVs. However, the production units are often placed in a container frame with integrated suction piles and provided with over-trawling protection covers raising the weight of the entire subsea assembly to 1000 to 2000t. Examples are the Ormen Lange subsea templates of 1150t installed in 850m of water in 2005 and the Åsgard Subsea Compression Project containing structures over 2000t in weight, presently under construction in 300m of water. These water depths are not exactly deepwater in accordance with the definition given before. However, they can be seen as the first examples of a new generation of large and heavy infrastructure with sensitive rotating equipment that may be expected to extend into deep and very deep water. It is difficult to predict what the recent developments in subsea technology will mean for future DWL requirements. Some sources state that high DWL capacities of several 1000s of tons may be required down to 500m only; below that depth there is no need for over-trawling protection with associated heavy framing and foundation structures. The same sources expect the subsea infrastructure below 500m to be built up from serviceable units of maximally 400t of weight. Other parties expect the subsea market to see a development of large units similar to the IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 5 of 19 development topsides saw in the 80s. This may imply structures of several 1000s of tons to be installed to several 1000s of meters depth. It is most likely also a matter of supply and demand: a contractor with the courage to invest in new high capacity DWL equipment will enable the industry to shift the boundaries to larger integrated units in deeper water. WEIGHING STEEL WIRE VERSUS FIBER ROPE Although a number of Joint Industry Projects on the development of fiber rope based DWL is still to be completed, it can be stated that today fiber rope technology is mature enough to be a serious candidate for a new investment in DWL. For a contractor, the choice between steel wires and fiber ropes eventually is a matter of weighing costs and risks. It is beyond the scope of this paper to present a complete risk assessment. However, some more can be said about the costs. CAPEX of DWL system CAPEX The discussion about steel wires or fiber ropes often is an emotional one. Supporters of steel wire claim fiber ropes to be excessively expensive and brochures of fiber rope suppliers emphasize the dramatic savings in equipment weight, paying off in attractive savings on CAPEX. Figure 4 shows the facts: even though fiber ropes are costing 5 times more per ton Safe Working Load than steel wires, the figure shows that down to a depth of 2000m, the total investment in a DWL system (wires plus winches) is fairly similar for steel wires and fiber ropes. This also explains why most contractors traditionally working with crane vessels and steel wires have not made the step to fiber ropes yet. However, at depths of 3000m and beyond, fiber rope systems win on investment costs, due to the further declining effectiveness of steel wires as shown in Figure 3. steel wires fiber ropes 0 1000 2000 3000 Water depth [m] 4000 Figure 4 – Relative CAPEX of DWL systems for 500t payload An element not included in Figure 4 is the CAPEX of the buoyancy required for the DWL system. A system suited to lower 500t to 3000m depth on steel wires will weigh about 1500t; a system with the same capacity on fiber ropes about one-third of that. The difference in weight of 1000t is hardly recognized on the deck of a crane vessel, but has a significant impact on size, draft and speed of an OSV, with an associated cost effect for the contractor. It explains why most of the OSV operators involved in DWL have made the step to fiber ropes already. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 6 of 19 There is another element not included in Figure 4. Steel wire DWL systems need more parts in the reeving and thus a longer installed wire length for lowering a certain load to a certain depth than fiber ropes with a similar strength; a part of the steel wire capacity is needed for carrying the own weight of the wires. As a result, a steel wire DWL system has more capacity at shallower depths, where the own weight uses less of the available capacity. The effect is illustrated in Figure 5, in which a steel wire and a fiber rope system are compared for providing a DWL capacity of 400t at 3000m depth. For the steel wire system, two 19km long wires of 51mm diameter are needed, for the fiber rope system two 9.5km long ropes of 72mm diameter, the steel wire and the fiber rope having about the same Safe Working Load. With the steel wire DWL system, the full crane lifting capacity of 3600t is available to a depth of 500m, for the fiber rope DWL system only to a depth of 250m. The superior DWL capabilities at shallower depths is an extra one gets inherently delivered with a steel wire DWL system. This extra capacity at shallower depths as shown in Figure 5 may be an incentive for a heavy lift contractor, for whom the weight of steel wires is not a real limitation, to accept the extra CAPEX of steel wires in water depths beyond 3000m as shown in Figure 4. Capacity [t] 0 0 1000 Water depth [m] -1000 -2000 2000 3000 4000 steel wires 2 x 19000m Ø51mm fiber ropes 2 x 9500m Ø72mm -3000 Figure 5 – DWL capacity versus depth for steel wire and fiber rope of similar Safe Working Load OPEX DWL systems using steel wires or fiber ropes may involve quite different write-off, repair and maintenance, as well as handling and storage costs. In addition, the DWL system may have a strong influence on the offshore installation vessel. Simply stated, the OPEX of the offshore operation is expressed by the following formula: OPEX = Day rate of installation vessel x Net duration of activity —————————————————————— Operability of activity The lighter weight of fiber rope DWL systems tends to enable the deployment of smaller type installation vessels such as OSVs. An OSV can be hired at a considerably lower day rate than a conventional crane vessel. The reverse, however, is that operations from an OSV may take IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 7 of 19 longer due to the absence of a large deck space and an offshore crane. In addition, the operability of an OSV may be considerably lower than for a crane vessel due to rougher vessel motions. The evaluation of steel wires versus fiber ropes should involve the OPEX of the offshore operation. OPERABILITY A DWL operation involves four phases: over-boarding; passing the splash zone; lowering to depth through the water column; and landing of the structure on the seabed. The operability during over-boarding and passing of the splash-zone is not significantly influenced by the use of steel wires or fiber ropes and is therefore not further addressed in this paper. These phases can however be difficult for an OSV with a negative impact on its operability. Semisubmersible crane vessels usually have an excellent operability during over-boarding, thanks to their ample deck space and the possibility of using two cranes (Figure 6). Figure 6 – Large deck space of crane vessel enables effective DWL operations When lowering a structure through the water column to the seabed, the DWL system behaves as a multi-body mass-spring system, involving vessel, wires and object lowered. The dynamic behavior of the system is analyzed using the in-house program LiftDyn, suited to analyze the first-order dynamic response of multi-body mass-spring systems in the frequency domain. The program contains a library with the geometries and hydrodynamic properties with associated mass and damping parameters of all vessels frequently in operation by Heerema. These vessel bodies can be made part of a wider mass-spring system representing the lifting assembly to be analyzed (Figure 7). With this model, the RAOs can be computed of all bodies and points of interest in the system. Linear responses are calculated by combining these RAOs with wave spectra for a range of wave periods and unit wave height. The responses are typically calculated at directional intervals of 15 degrees and thus allow assessment of the best and worst heading for specific operations. If needed, wave spreading can also be taken into account. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 8 of 19 Figure 7 – LiftDyn visual representation The masses are formed by the mass of the vessel, the distributed mass of the wires, the mass of the structure, the mass of the underwater block and the added mass of the water moving with the structure. Damping is generated between the structure and the surrounding water, the magnitude of damping depending on the size and the shape of the structure. Steel wires have a higher axial stiffness than fiber ropes. In addition, the spring stiffness of the hoisting system decreases linearly with the length of the wires. The spring stiffness of the DWL system is thus highly variable. Moreover, fiber ropes have a strongly non-linear elastic behavior and respond different under static and dynamic loading (Ref. 3). During lowering to depth, the risk exists that the DWL system passes a depth zone at which the mass-spring system becomes critical and gets in resonance, exited by the vessel motions. Large vertical motions during lowering to depth are not a serious problem as long as the wires of the DWL system do not fall slack or the capacities of the hoisting system and lift rigging are not exceeded. However, generally the damping of the system is such that it prevents this from happening. For this reason, the phase of lowering to depth is not further addressed here. STRUCTURE LANDING USING STEEL WIRES OR FIBER ROPES For several reasons, the landing of a structure on the seabed is subject to limitations. For suction piles, a high landing speed may cause piping as a result of entrapped water escaping from under the tip of the pile, the piping channels obstructing the suction process. For subsea structures, a high landing speed may cause erosion of the seabed by water escaping from underneath the structure, the erosion channels threatening the levelness of the structure on the seabed. Moreover, the impact of a hard landing may cause damage or increased wear of sensitive rotating equipment, such as compressors, contained in the subsea module. For many DWL operations, as IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 9 of 19 a kind of standard, a maximum landing speed of 0.5m/s is specified. This landing speed has been taken as a limit for the operability study in this paper. A short operability study was carried out, with the aim to illustrate how during the installation of a suction pile the landing speed limit influences the operability of different DWL systems, using both steel wires and fiber ropes, when operated from different vessels at different water depths in different wave regimes. As reference water depths, 1000, 2000 and 3000m were chosen. The analysis involved the assessment of the maximum Hs-Tp up to which the landing speed at the seabed could be kept below 0.5m/s. Regarding the installation vessels, Heerema‟s semisubmersible DCV Balder and monohull DCV Aegir were compared with an OSV. For each vessel, DWL systems were defined, consisting of specific combinations of wire diameter, wire strength, wire weight, number of wires in the reeving bundle, length of the bundle, axial stiffness of the wire and weight of the underwater hook. From the DWL system, mass, damping and spring stiffness parameters were assessed for use in the dynamic analysis. Per system analyzed, the parameters are summarized in Table 1. The suction pile was defined as a cylinder of 5m diameter, 30m long with a mass of 150t. The added masses was computed in compliance with DNV RP-C205. The mass of the underwater hoist and the mass of the wire bundle were derived from the arrangement of the DWL system. As damping, 10% of the critical damping was used, a figure based on experience and depending on the open or closed state of the suction pile vent valves. The critical damping Bc is computed as: Bc = 2 . {(m + M) . k}0.5 …………………………………………. (1) in which m = mass of structure M = added mass of structure k= spring stiffness computed by Formula (2) The spring stiffness k is formed by the bundle of wires of the DWL system according to the formula: Erope . A k = ———— ………………………………………………..…… (2) L in which IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 10 of 19 Erope = axial stiffness of the wires A = total cross-sectional area of the bundle of wires L= length of the wires between the crane boom tip and the underwater hook SPRING STIFFNESS OF DWL SYSTEM Erope, A and L were derived from the DWL hoisting systems deployed. In the definition of the DWL system, the Safe Working Load of the steel wires was based on a safety factor of 3 with respect to the Minimum Breaking Load, for the fiber ropes a safety factor of 4.5 was used, reported as industry practice in Ref. 4. The DAF value was assumed at 1.3. This value was later verified not to be exceeded in LiftDyn. Table 1 summarizes the parameters of the DWL systems used in LiftDyn. Regarding the DWL system of the Balder, it was assumed that the existing steel wire DWL system in the starboard crane was used. This system consists of two traction winches, each reeved with a 19000m long steel wire of 51mm diameter. For reaching 3000m deep, a 12-parts reeving is minimally required; this reeving is also suitable for 1000 and 2000m depth. In order to appraise the effect of a stiffer system, for 1000 and 2000m also a „maximum reeving‟ was applied, implying the maximum spring stiffness that can be achieved with the existing steel wires. For 1000m this comes down to a 32-parts reeving; for 2000m a 16-parts reeving. For the Balder with fiber ropes, the existing DWL system in the starboard crane was assumed to be fitted with 48mm diameter fiber ropes deployed from fiber rope winches in a 6-parts reeving, the same reeving at all water depths. The multi-parts steel wire and fiber rope DWL systems of the Balder are not very suitable for AHC, so for the Balder, the effect of AHC has not been analyzed. The Aegir has a dedicated DWL system suspended from the pipelay tower. The system consists of two traction winches, each reeved with a 7300m long steel wire of 126mm diameter, which can be deployed in a 1-, 2- or 4-parts reeving down to 3500m depth. The 1-part reeving has sufficient capacity for lowering the 150t suction pile to 3000m. Both a 1-part and a 2-parts reeving were analyzed in order to assess the effect of a stiffer system. The 4-parts reeving is less suitable for installing suction piles. The Aegir DWL system has a wire guidance system in the upper region of the moonpool; this was simulated by assuming the upper block of the DWL system at deck level. For the analysis of fiber ropes, the Aegir DWL system was supposed to be fitted with a 124mm fiber rope deployed from a fiber rope winch in a 1-part reeving. The Aegir DWL system has an AHC provision on one of the steel wires. This system allows for an effective stroke of 2.5m and a maximum wire velocity of 1m/s. For the fiber rope analysis a CTCU type winch was assumed with built-in AHC having a velocity limitation of 1.5m/s. For the AHC analyses, only 1-part reevings were considered, both for steel wire and fiber rope. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 11 of 19 The OSV could just lower the suction pile to 3000m using its main drum fitted with a 8000m long steel wire of 76mm diameter in a 2-parts reeving as shown in Figure 8. This reeving was also used at the other water depths. When working with fiber rope, a 104mm diameter rope was assumed in a 1-part reeving running via the A-frame. With respect to AHC, for the steel wire, a system was assumed with a maximum effective stroke of 5m and a maximum wire velocity of 1.4m/s, both on the single wire. For the 2-parts reeving, this comes down to a maximum effective stroke of 2.5m and a maximum velocity of the load of 0.7m/s. For the fiber rope DWL system, a CTCU type unit was assumed with built-in AHC having a velocity limitation of 1.5m/s. Figure 8 – OSV with 2-parts reeving The Erope of steel wires was assessed at 86GPa following the approach described in Ref. 5. For reason of simplification, the Erope of fiber ropes was assumed to be linear with a value of 29GPa as derived from the rope elongation diagram given in Ref. 6. This linear Erope for fiber rope neglects the non-linear stress-strain behavior and the difference between the static and dynamic axial stiffness. The Erope values of 86 and 29GPa are to be used in combination with the gross cross-sectional area of the wire. LIFTDYN ANALYSES OF OPERABILITY LiftDyn converts the vessel motions into crane tip motions via the geometry of the vessel. The x, y and z positions of the crane tip in relation to the vessel hull for the different DWL systems are listed in Table 2 With the parameters of Tables 1 and 2, the response of the multi-body massspring system was analyzed in the frequency domain and RAOs were determined for the vertical velocity of the load. The significant vertical velocity was computed and further processed into the 20 minutes Most Probable Maximum vertical velocity as a function of Hs and Tp, the 20 minutes representing the time needed for the landing operation. With the criterion that the 20 minutes Most Probable Maximum vertical velocity should be smaller than 0.5m/s, an Hs-Tp line was computed below which this criterion is satisfied and above which it is not. This line is defined as the „operability line‟. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 12 of 19 Table 1 – Parameters used in LiftDyn Water depth 1000m STIFF FLEXIBLE Mass [t] DAF Added mass [t] Damping [% of critical] BALDER Diameter of wire [mm] Safe Working Load [kN] No. of parts Length per wire [m] Stiffness k = EA/L [kN/m] Critical damping [kNs/m] Mass wire bundle [kg/m] Mass u/w block [t] AEGIR Diameter of wire [mm] Safe Working Load [kN] No. of parts Length per wire [m] Stiffness k = EA/L [kN/m] Critical damping [kNs/m] Mass wire bundle [kg/m] Mass u/w block [t] OSV Diameter of wire [mm] Safe Working Load [kN] No. of parts Length per wire [m] Stiffness k = EA/L [kN/m] Critical damping [kNs/m] Mass wire bundle [kg/m] Mass u/w block [t] STEEL WIRES 2000m STIFF FLEXIBLE 150 1.3 669 10% 51 660 32 1100 5076 4078 352 74 51 660 12 1100 1904 2497 132 31 51 660 16 2100 1329 2087 176 31 51 660 12 2100 997 1807 132 31 126 4300 2 1075 1997 2558 151 10 126 4300 1 1075 999 1809 75 5 126 4300 2 2075 1035 1841 151 10 126 4300 1 2075 517 1302 75 5 76 1710 2 1000 781 1600 58 15 3000m STIFF FLEXIBLE 1000m FIBER ROPES 2000m 3000m 150 1.3 669 10% 126 4300 2 3075 698 1512 151 10 76 1710 2 2000 391 1131 58 15 51 660 12 3100 675 1488 132 31 48 350 6 1100 287 970 11 31 48 350 6 2100 150 702 11 31 48 350 6 3100 102 578 11 31 126 4300 1 3075 349 1069 75 5 124 2186 1 1075 327 1035 13 5 124 2186 1 2075 169 745 13 5 124 2186 1 3075 114 612 13 5 76 1710 2 3000 260 924 58 15 104 1680 1 1000 247 900 10 5 104 1680 1 2000 124 636 10 5 104 1680 1 3000 82 520 10 5 Table 2 – Crane tip positions used in LiftDyn DWL system BALDER AEGIR OSV steel wires fiber ropes X Longitudinal vessel axis 86.5m fore of stern 76.7m fore of stern Y Transverse vessel axis 7m out of starboard 5m portside of centerline Z Vertical 118.4m above keel 17m above keel 2.6m aft of stern 5.2m aft of stern vessel centerline vessel centerline 13m above keel 20m above keel For each of the 24 wave directions analyzed an operability line was determined, resulting in a bundle of operability lines in the Hs-Tp domain. The installation of a suction pile allows the installation vessel to choose the best heading. With reference to the bundle of operability lines (Figure 9), this implies that the upper envelope of the bundle is taken as the governing operability line. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 13 of 19 Best heading upper envelope Figure 9 – Typical LiftDyn operability curves (only 8 of the 24 wave directions shown for clarity) Gulf of Mexico Perdido Norwegian Sea Aasta Hansteen West of Africa Angola Block 31 Figure 10 – Probability density diagrams of working season sea states The next step was, to compare this operability line with the Hs-Tp spectrum in a number of different wave regimes. As typical examples, sea conditions of the working season were taken of the Gulf of Mexico (Perdido), representing a moderate spectrum with short waves; of the Norwegian Sea (Aasta Hansteen), representing harsh conditions with high and relatively short waves; and of the West of Africa (Angola Block 31), representing an open ocean spectrum with low and very long waves. For the Gulf of Mexico and Norwegian Sea, the working season was defined as the months April to September, for Angola, as the months October to March. The probability density diagrams of Hs-Tp of these seasonal wave spectra are shown in Figure 10. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 14 of 19 % Operability Figure 11 – Operability derived by integrating probability density below the operability curve When the operability line is plotted in the Hs-Tp domain, it cuts through the probability density diagram. The integrated probability below the operability line represents the average operability over the installation season; the integrated probability above the line the non-operability. The principle is shown in Figure 11. As a final step, the operability was computed for the DWL systems shown in Table 1 in combination with the three wave spectra of Figure 10. The effect of AHC was analyzed by applying four criteria: AHC was assumed to reduce the effect of the vessel motions on the motions of the load by 90%. At the 10% motions left, the structure landing speed should not exceed 0.5m/s; The crane tip should not move at more than the stroke limit of the AHC system; The crane tip should not move faster than the velocity limit of the AHC system; The design capacity of the DWL system should not be exceeded. OPERABILITY RESULTS The operability results are shown in Figure 12. The Balder at best heading performs better using steel wires than fiber ropes at 1000 and 2000m. A stiff reeving, with as many parts in the reeving as the installed wire length allows, performs slightly better than a flexible reeving. At 3000m, the operability of the Balder with steel wires drops dramatically in areas with long swells and / or high waves. The Balder using fiber ropes shows the opposite effect as compared to steel wires when the water depth increases: at 1000 and 2000m, fiber ropes perform poorly (except for the Gulf of Mexico), at 3000m they perform very well. The Aegir at best heading and using steel wires without AHC performs almost the same as the Balder in 1000m of water. In 2000m, the performance of the Aegir using a flexible 1-part steel wire reeving is considerably worse than using the stiffer 2-parts reeving. Using the 2-parts reeving, the performance of the Aegir is about the same as the Balder at that depth. Apparently, the fact that the Aegir 1-part reeving is more flexible than the Balder 12- and 16-parts reevings in 2000m (see Table 1), plays an important role in the drop of operability of the Aegir 1-part IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 15 of 19 reeving at 2000m. In 3000m, in most cases the Aegir performs better with fiber ropes than with steel wires; only in the West of Africa, the 2-parts steel wire system performs better at 3000m. Operability [%] 100 Balder without Active Heave Compensation 1000m 2000m 3000m steel fiber steel fiber steel fiber 80 60 40 Steel wires, flexible 20 Steel wires, stiff Fiber ropes 0 100 Operability [%] Operability [%] 100 Aegir without Active Heave Compensation 1000m 2000m 3000m steel fiber steel fiber steel fiber 80 60 40 20 60 40 20 0 OSV without Active Heave Compensation 1000m 2000m 3000m steel fiber steel fiber steel fiber 60 40 20 100 Operability [%] Operability [%] 80 80 0 0 100 Aegir with Active Heave Compensation 1000m 2000m 3000m steel fiber steel fiber steel fiber OSV with Active Heave Compensation 1000m 2000m 3000m steel fiber steel fiber steel fiber 80 60 40 20 0 Figure 12 – Balder, Aegir and OSV performance on suction pile installation The AHC system on one of the steel wires of the Aegir enhances the operability to between 95 and 100% in all wave climates and at all water depths investigated. When using fiber ropes, AHC would even further improve the operability to near 100% in all areas and at all depths. From Figure 12, it is further observed that the steel wire DWL systems of Balder and Aegir tend to have a worse operability as the water depth increases, whereas the operability of the fiber rope systems improves in deeper water. The reason is probably that the steel wire DWL systems behave rigid, urging the suction pile to follow the motions of the vessel, whereas the fiber rope systems behave compliant, causing the suction pile to hang still when the crane hook moves up IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 16 of 19 and down. However, this phenomenon could not be fully explained by comparing natural periods and RAO diagrams. This is definitely a subject for further study. The OSV with steel wires and without AHC has a moderate operability of 50 to 70% in the Gulf of Mexico; in the other wave climates the operability is unacceptably low at less than 10%. AHC on the steel wire system does not give much improvement: in the Gulf of Mexico the operability improves slightly in 1000 and 2000m of water, but worsens in 3000m. In the other areas, the operability stays below 20%. For the OSV, fiber ropes without AHC give some improvement over steel wires at 1000 and 2000m and a large improvement at 3000m. A substantially better operability is achieved in 1000 and 2000m of water by adding AHC to the fiber ropes. In 3000m, in some wave regimes fiber ropes without AHC perform better than with AHC. It should be noted that a good deal of the poor behavior of the OSV is due to the fact that the suction pile is lowered from the A-frame at the stern of the vessel. The behavior would be considerably better when the DWL system would be deployed over the side. However, such a lowering position requires a substantial offshore crane, in turn requiring a substantial OSV with a day rate close to that of a crane vessel. Better operability therefore comes at a cost. The required AHC capacities involve a substantial unit. On the Aegir, the AHC system is built in the under-deck DWL system. On an OSV, the AHC equipment will occupy a substantial part of the deck. Figure 13a shows the size of the AHC system required for steel wires, projected on the 28 x 15m deck of the OSV. Not too much space is left for the handling of rigging; referring to Figure 13c, the AHC unit will definitely prohibit over-boarding of the suction pile from the OSV‟s own deck. Steel wire AHC unit Figure 13a AHC unit on OSV deck 28m 15m 28m 15m 15m 28m Fiber rope AHC unit Suction pile Figure 13b Figure 13c Fiber rope winch on OSV deck Two suction piles on OSV deck The size of the fiber rope winch on the OSV deck is shown in Figure 13b. The size is smaller than the AHC unit needed for the steel wires. However, referring to Figure 13c, also the fiber rope winch unit will most likely prohibit over-boarding of the suction pile from the OSV‟s own deck. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 17 of 19 Larger OSVs are available with more deck space. However, as said before, they have a higher day rate, illustrating again that better operability comes at a cost. DE-TUNING The DWL system behaves as a complex multi-body mass-spring system in which the spring stiffness of the hoisting system plays a dominant role for the magnitude of the hook load, high hook loads sometimes being generated by inertia forces, sometimes by resonance phenomena. In specific cases, the step from steel wires to fiber ropes shows a drastic improvement of the operability. The same effect can be achieved by applying an elastic stretcher in the steel wire hoisting system. Nylon, for instance, has about one-third of the strength of the fiber ropes used in the analysis (with fiber rope properties taken from Ref. 6) and an Erope of about 30 times lower. This implies that a nylon stretcher of 100m length has the same spring stiffness k = EA/L as 1000m length of fiber ropes with the same capacity. Referring to the Balder at 3000m water depth in Figure 12, a 300m long nylon stretcher would enhance the performance of steel wires to that of the fiber ropes at 3000m, thus improving the operability in West of Africa, for instance, from 25% to 70% or in the Norwegian Sea from 50% to 85%. It should be kept in mind, that the opposite can also occur: at 1000m, a 100m long stretcher would worsen the operability of the Balder in West of Africa from 90% to 10%. On the OSV, the same effect can be reached. Referring to Figure 12 again, a 100m long nylon stretcher in the steel wire DWL system would bring the operability of the OSV in 1000m of water from the „steel wire‟ curve to the „fiber rope‟ curve and greatly improve the performance, in particular when in addition AHC is used. The over-boarding of a suction pile including rigging comprising a 100m long stretcher would be a challenge. Heerema has done this operation from a crane vessel by handing over the pile with long rigging to the OSV. A Passive Heave Compensation system could have the same positive effect as an elastic stretcher, or even better, in particular when the system is equipped with a controllable gas spring. CONCLUSIONS 1. Down to 2000m water depth a fiber rope DWL system is not significantly cheaper than a system based on steel wires. At 3000m and more, the costs of a fiber rope system are significantly lower. 2. Both the semisubmersible and monohull crane vessel installing suction piles, perform considerably better on steel wires than on fiber ropes down to 2000m. At depths deeper than 2000m, fiber ropes perform better. IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 18 of 19 3. The performance of steel wires can be brought to the level of fiber ropes by applying an elastic stretcher of limited length in the hoisting system or by the application of Passive Heave Compensation. 4. An OSV installing suction piles definitely needs fiber ropes and AHC for achieving an acceptable operability. The effect of fiber ropes could also be achieved by steel wires comprising an elastic stretcher. 5. The choice between steel wires and fiber ropes to be made when investing in a DWL system must consider the type of installation activities expected, the wave climate and water depth of operation and the vessel from which the system is deployed. In some cases, fiber ropes are better, in other cases steel wires. 6. Steel wire DWL systems designed for deepwater tend to have a higher capacity in shallower water than fiber rope systems designed for the same capacity in the same water depth. REFERENCES 1. Internet, www.statoil.com/en/technologyinnovation/fielddevelopment/aboutsubsea. 2. S. Torben, P. Ingeberg, Ø. Bunes, S. Bull, J. Paterson, D. Davidson, “Fiber Rope Deployment System for Ultra-Deepwater Installations”, Paper 18932, Offshore Technology Conference, Houston, May 2007. 3. J.R. Navarro, J. van Drunen, R. de Bruin, “Monitoring Campaign on Subsea Installation”, Paper 83324, 31st International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering, Rio de Janeiro, July 2012. 4. I. Bjørnevik, P. Hellevik, P. Ingeberg, S. Torben, “Testing of Ropes for Heavy Duty Fibre Rope Deployment Systems”, Rio Oil & Gas Expo and Conference 2012, Paper IBP1875-12. 5. M. Raoof, T.J. Davies, “Simple Determination of the Axial Stiffness for Large Diameter Independent Wire Rope Core or Fiber Rope Wire Ropes”, Civil and Building Engineering Department, Loughborough University, Loughborough, Leicestershire, UK, 2003. 6. Internet, www.cortlandcompany.com/sites/default/files/downloads/media/technicalliterature-braid-optimized-bending-bob-tech-sheet_1.pdf IMCA Annual Seminar 2013 Deepwater lowering – a contractor weighing wires and winches Page 19 of 19