© Gastech 2005 Advances in Assessment of LNG Sloshing for Large
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© Gastech 2005 Advances in Assessment of LNG Sloshing for Large
Advances in Assessment of LNG Sloshing for Large Membrane Ships A. J. Richardson, W. H. Bray, Qatargas II R. E. Sandström, R. T. Lokken, ExxonMobil Upstream Research M. A. Danaczko, ExxonMobil Development Company GasTech 2005 Bilbao, Spain March 14-17, 2005 ABSTRACT Large ships are a strategic element to reducing cost for delivery of liquefied natural gas to worldwide markets. They reduce delivery cost through economies of scale and they will help meet the demand for ship volume with the existing construction capacity. The excellent performance history of LNG ships over the past 40 years is a well-established fact. However, the introduction of large LNG ships poses new technical challenges for our industry. One of the challenges in moving to larger ships is the potential to have higher cargo sloshing loads with larger ship tanks. Since membrane insulation systems are installed inside the tank, they are in direct contact with the LNG and must be capable of withstanding all loads from sloshing. Qatargas II and ExxonMobil have led a major technical effort with collaboration with Gaztransport & Technigaz S.A.s to enable the safe design of a new class of cost effective large LNG membrane ships for our projects. This paper highlights our recent advances in sloshing load prediction and membrane capacity assessment. These advances were essential to establishing requirements for the industry's first application of LNG ships up to 216,000m3, a significant increase in size over the 155,000 m3 LNG ships recently ordered by industry, and will enable the safe design of even larger, 250,000m3 LNG ships. © Gastech 2005 1 Introduction The LNG industry will soon see the first application of a new generation of LNG ships from Qatar with cargo capacities above 200,000m3. These new ships represent the most significant step change in LNG ship size in nearly 30 years. This step change has been made possible by a major technical effort led by Qatargas II (QG II) a joint project between Qatar Petroleum (QP), 70% and ExxonMobil (EM), 30%, and our close collaboration with Gaztransport & Technigaz S.A.s (GTT). Growth in LNG Ship Size by Year - Figure 1.1 Industry interest in large LNG ships has been the subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years [Ref 1]. While some of these studies presented designs for large LNG ships, most focused on compatibility of larger ships with the existing LNG receiving terminal infrastructure, dominated by Far East markets. Growing demand for LNG in western gas markets is providing new opportunities to pursue delivery systems that can accommodate larger ships and improve the competitiveness of LNG gas supplies. Conventional size LNG ships have established an excellent performance history that spans more than 40 years. In the mid 70’s, the size of LNG ships jumped from 78,000m3 to 126,000m3 [Ref 2]. Since then conventional LNG ship sizes have grown incrementally to nearly 160,000m3. The move to significantly larger LNG ships does pose technical challenges for ship design and construction. One such challenge is to ensure that large LNG tanks have the integrity to withstand loads due to cargo motion and sloshing. Larger tanks have the potential for higher cargo sloshing loads. While sloshing is a design consideration for all containment technologies, membrane systems are unique in that their insulation is located inside the cargo tanks. Being in direct contact with the LNG, these systems must be capable of withstanding all the loads from liquid movement and impact. This paper highlights advances in sloshing load prediction and structural capacity assessment that we developed to establish our confidence in a first application of LNG membrane ships above 200,000m3 (Q-Flex). These advances include improvements in ship motion predictions, physical measurement of sloshing loads, and characterization of loads and capacity under in-service conditions. Adherence to underlying fundamental physics has been a key element in the selection, development, and confirmation of the engineering methods we used in this work. © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 2 Maintaining the excellent safety performance history, as new LNG ship designs emerge, is essential to our industry. For this reason the membrane ship designs that we evaluated are based on scale-up of conventional sized ships. This approach enabled us to retain the benefits of existing designs. It also enabled us to build from the confidence and performance of ships in service and the experience of GTT. Qatargas II and ExxonMobil are now taking the initiative to share our knowledge on LNG sloshing to facilitate a consistent understanding of the design integrity and acceptance of new LNG ships. 2 The LNG Sloshing Design Challenge. All ships that carry liquids in their tanks are subject to sloshing. Sloshing is a liquid motion within a tank produced by ship motions at sea. Sloshing becomes more pronounced when the frequencies of ship motions match frequencies associated with liquid motion in the tanks. Sloshing imposes dynamic loads on the tank structure. Designers must ensure tank structures have sufficient integrity to withstand these loads under normal operating and extreme in service conditions. Pressure [bar] Rise Time 0 Ship Motions At Sea Cargo Sloshing 5 10 15 Time [milliseconds] 20 25 Dynamic Loads On Tanks Figure 2.1 For many types of ship tanks, designers have relatively straightforward options with internal geometry such as stiffeners and swash bulkheads to impede liquid motion and reduce sloshing loads to acceptable levels. However, the unique features of LNG membrane tanks that make them attractive for LNG ships also require more sophisticated engineering capabilities to ensure tank integrity. The two most common membrane systems for LNG ships are the Gaz Transport No. 96 (Figure 2.2) and the Technigaz Mark III (Figure 2.3). The membrane insulation inside the tank protects the ship’s structure from the effects of cryogenic temperatures. The Gaztransport No. 96 system consists of two layers of insulating plywood boxes, and the Technigaz Mark III uses two layers of plywood backed polyurethane foam. These systems are the result of balancing requirements for thermal protection and strength to withstand cargo loads. Options to impede liquid motion with these systems can be costly if not impractical. Minimizing changes to proven systems is a key objective of our scaleup to larger LNG ships. Gaztransport No. 96 Membrane System - Figure 2.2 © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 3 Technigaz Mark III Membrane System - Figure 2.3 3 “Comparative” Approach. Our initial strategy was to compare sloshing on the large LNG ships relative to existing conventional sized ships. We required peak membrane responses in the large ship to be equal or less than those in the benchmark ship. Comparison Between Conventional Benchmark Ship And New Large (Q-Flex) Ships Figure 3.1 We used a conventional 138,000m3 LNG ship having a 4-tank arrangement as our benchmark for comparison. It provided reasonably close similarity with our large ship tank proportions. This geometric similarity helps maintain consistency with the types of liquid motion condition that produce sloshing conditions. We compared the benchmark and large ships for both the No. 96 and Mark III membrane systems. Since membrane responses are sensitive to dynamic amplification from sloshing loads, we based our comparisons on membrane response rather than loads. Reducing uncertainty in load prediction and membrane response was a significant element of our work. We undertook a number of investigations to validate key building blocks in our assessment process. For example, we conducted… © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 4 • multi-scale model tests to ensure safe scaling of results from model test loads to determine membrane response, Figure 3.2 – Multi-scale model testing (1/50 – left and 1/20 – right) • extensive screening throughout the tank to check sensitivities to fill level, ship heading, and wave period, Figure 3.3 – Extensive Screening for Peak Load Locations and Conditions • tests with multiple gases, gas densities and gas pressure to ensure adequacy of using water and air tests Figure 3.4 – Confirming Adequacy of Air/Water Based Model Tests © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 5 • measurements of loads at rates up to 50,000 observations per second to establish minimum sampling rates to avoid underestimating peak loads and adequately define rise times, Tr (milliseconds), Rise Time Examples of Same Time History at Lower Sampling Rates Example Sloshing Pressure Time History Pressure 20,000 observations per second (similar to original pulse) Sampling Rate for original measurement 50,000 observations per second 0 5 10 15 20 Time History (ms) 25 10,000 observations per second (lower pressure & longer rise time) 30 0 5 10 15 20 Time History (ms) 25 30 Figure 3.5 – Impact of Data Sampling Rates on Measurement of Peak Loads • statistical analyses to determine test durations required to achieve statistically repeatable results, and 10 -3 Exceedence [1/s] Ppeak pressure defined from curve fit with 95% confidence 10 3 hour level -4 Conf. low: 16.9 Conf. hi: 25.8 Pressure [bar] Figure 3.6 – 30 hr Test Duration to Consistently Define 3 hr Design Loads • collaborative effort with GTT on physical testing and analytic modeling to develop dynamic response for cryogenic in-service conditions Figure 3.7 – Membrane Models to Evaluate Dynamic Response to Sloshing Loads The advantage of comparison to existing ships is that it provides a practical basis for establishing equivalent risk with a well accepted standard design that has a history of outstanding performance. Using similar processes to evaluate both the benchmark and large ships reduces assessment uncertainties. Furthermore, the physical similarities between the benchmark and new ships simplify © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 6 the assessment and focus the effort on minimizing differences. These differences are dominated by load prediction and adjustments for dynamic amplification of membrane response. The comparative approach only assesses relative integrity and not absolute integrity. The reference for relative integrity is the benchmark ship. To accommodate higher sloshing loads with the comparative method, we pursue design changes for the larger ships that will reduce response to levels predicted in the benchmark ship. Working with GTT, we were able to identify modest changes to accommodate the sloshing load increases that we had measured for the Q-Flex ships. Looking ahead to even larger LNG ships, 250,000 m3 (Q-Max), it was not obvious that we could achieve further strengthening without significant membrane changes. Although the comparative approach provided a sound basis for QFlex requirements, we believe that development of an absolute assessment capability is attainable and could provide more flexibility for setting Q-Max design requirements. For these reasons the QG II Project along with ExxonMobil are pursuing developments that will enable us to move toward an “absolute” practice for assessment of membranes. 4 “Absolute” Approach. The concept is to assess integrity by demonstrating that membrane capacity is sufficient to withstand predicted loads. An absolute assessment enables us to establish integrity on the basis of first principles and traditional engineering methods. As shown in Figure 4.1, the process starts with definition of the system and design basis. The next steps involve prediction of sloshing loads and membrane capacity. In developing capacity, we determine the minimum expected for in-service cryogenic conditions. On the load side, statistical methods are used to determine the most likely maximum load in the design environment expected. The final step is to ensure capacity exceeds loads by appropriate safety margins. Define ship, tanks, and design criteria Sloshing Loads Structural Capacity Predict sloshing loads from model tests Predict dynamic capacity from component tests & in-service analytic models Compare loads and capacities Figure 4.1 – Framework for Traditional Engineering Basis for Sloshing Assessment of Membranes Development of an “absolute” assessment methodology poses enormous technical challenges. Robust capabilities to identify and predict critical sloshing loads and associated in-service dynamic capacity of membranes are essential. One of the most significant developments over the past year has come from our identification of the highly localized nature of sloshing that occurs in tanks with fill levels above 80%. For the Q-Flex tank geometry, we found during our screening studies that the tank top corners consistently had the © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 7 highest loads. Measurements on the tank top away from the perimeter edges were significantly lower. Pressure measurements are sensitive to sensor size (diameter). We found significant differences between sensors as small as 2mm and 5mm (10cm and 25 cm full scale). All combined, these observations suggested that peak pressures are highly localized and can vary significantly over areas smaller than individual panels. Sloshing events at model scale are too fast for visual study. However, high-speed video cameras and concurrent pressure measurements enable us to gain a much better sense of sloshing during peak events. The most severe events were those associated with formation of a liquid column running up the tank wall. The upper surface of this column, even under ideal 2-D test conditions, is rarely perfectly flat. When the highest point on the column reaches the tank top, initial contact produces the immediate creation of a jet flow along the tank top that sprays liquid back into the tank. Recorded pressures decay dramatically after initiation of the jet. Figure 4.2 shows a typical event during a 2-D test. It shows the point of initial contact with the tank top (left) and the position of the liquid near the end of the pressure pulse (right). The chart (center) shows time histories for each pressure sensor on the tank top. The dark objects that appear to protrude into the tank are actually screws that hold the Plexiglas tank together and are not inside with the liquid. Other sensors on the tank top see relatively small pressures even during their subsequent immersion. It should be quite clear from this example that sloshing impacts can be highly local events. Figure 4.2 – Anatomy of a Peak Sloshing Load Event These observations provided a basis for design of a new sensor array that enables measurement of pressure distributions over a single membrane panel. Figure 4.3 shows a photograph of one of the new sensor arrays and an example of how the average pressure changes with loaded area. Each point on the chart represents the expected 3 hour maximum. This level of spatial resolution is essential to enabling rational absolute assessments. Interior (standard panels) Perimeter Pressure (bar) Perimeter (corner design) Interior array Top corner sensor 250-6 Int block 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 Loaded Area (m2) 1.00 Figure 4.3 – Sensor Array to Capture Spatial Distribution of Loads Over Membrane Panels In the example above, single sensor loads measured at the edge of the tank to assess membrane capacity would be overly conservative. Although point loads have been sufficient for comparative © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 8 purposes, an absolute approach requires spatial definition of pressures and corresponding membrane capacities. Using sensor arrays places heavy demands on data processing and storage with data sampling rates of 20,000 points per second for each sensor. We measure storage in terms of terabytes (1000 GB or 4 large hard drives). Decisions and quality control during model testing require at least a minimum level of real time processing of the data. Even with the recent improvements in processor and disk storage speeds, most of the computer effort is devoted to data capture and storage. Another very important element of an absolute methodology is the need for accurate measurements from the pressure sensors. One approach that we are developing draws on experience with wedge drop tests. They have been the subject of extensive research on ship bow slamming dating back to the 1930’s. Work by Wagner [Ref 3] and subsequent extensions by others [Ref 4-5] have led to analytic solutions. These solutions enable design of wedge drop tests to evaluate sensor accuracy by comparing predicted and measured pressure magnitudes and time histories. These tests provide reliable data for sensor acceptance, identifying bias and consistency. Figure 4.4 – Wedge Drop Tests to Confirm Pressure Sensor Accuracy We are pursuing development of an absolute methodology in steps, starting with bounding estimates of loads and capacity. Where bounding estimates might lead to a requirement for membrane modification, it may be productive to first investigate the potential to develop assessment improvements that could enable us to safely minimize the need for membrane modifications. One benefit with this approach is that it reduces risks associated with changes to a proven design. Minimizing membrane modifications preserves elements that yards have built and that have worked well in service. 5 Closing Remarks The LNG industry is moving rapidly to expand LNG markets in Europe and the US. Some new applications will use larger ships. Others will involve operations that may subject ships to partial fill conditions. Maintaining the LNG industry’s excellent safety and performance through this evolution will be crucial to the steady growth of new market opportunities. Experience with design of the QG II large LNG ships has led us to pursue development of an ability to assess both loads and capacity that can ensure safe / cost effective scale-up of large membrane ships © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 9 beyond Q-Flex. Extrapolation for new tank geometries and partial fill conditions based on load comparisons alone will not be sufficient. Advances in comparative assessments like the ones highlighted in this paper have enabled QG II to establish a sound technical basis for acceptance of large membrane-based LNG ships. New work to enable a rigorous methodology for absolute assessment of membranes is underway. Some of these developments are aimed at quantifying the effects from liquid/vapor interaction. Establishing an absolute methodology will enable evaluation of partial fill operations where the experience basis from existing ships is insufficient for using a comparative approach. Findings from our work are providing a basis to resolve many of the different views and assumptions we encountered from our review of existing literature and discussions with industry experts on load measurement, load scale-up, sloshing characterization, cushioning, and membrane interaction. We encourage industry to work toward the unification of an engineering standard that ensures market confidence in the integrity of new large membrane LNG ships consistent with industry’s excellent experience with the existing fleet. © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 10 6 Acknowledgements QGII Project wishes to acknowledge two organizations that have filled important roles in our effort to develop a confident basis for scale up of membrane based LNG ships. Cooperation and collaboration with GTT has been essential. Since the beginning of our work, GTT has been working with us on membrane strength and capacity. GTT is taking steps to incorporate recent advances from our joint work on load prediction and developing innovative solutions to meet membrane strength requirements. In addition, collaboration with Marintek on development of experimental methods and model testing for tank sloshing has been of significant value in this project. Marintek has demonstrated creativity and dedication through the long testing programs required for this project. The authors would also like to acknowledge the expertise and commitment of the QGII and ExxonMobil team that have achieved major advances which are enabling the first application of large LNG ships. Figures 2.2, 2.3, 3.7 figures contain GTT graphics with permission from GTT. Figure 4.4 contains an illustration from Ref 5. 7 References 1 2 3 4 5 Ffooks, Roger, NATURAL GAS BY SEA – The Development of a New Technology, Witherby & Co. Ltd., 1993 SIGGTO, LNG Log 26, 2000 Wagner, H., Über Stoss und Gleitvergänge an der Oberfläche von Flüssigkeiten, Zeitschr. f. Angewendte Mathematik und Mechanik, Vol 12, pp 192-235, 1932 Zhao, R. & Faltinsen, O., Water entry of two-dimensional bodies, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Volume 246, pp 593-612, 1993 Faltinsen, O., Sea Loads on Ships and Offshore Structures, Cambridge University Press, 1990 © Gastech 2005 Richardson, Bray, Sandström, Lokken, Danazcko 11