In this research, an evaluation of a frontal collision of a tanker with bulbous bow against a rigid structure was performed by reproducing experimentally this scenario in reduced scale and by numerical modeling using the finite element method. The purpose of this analysis was to evaluate the impact force and structural collapse mode of the bulbous bow. A model of an oil tanker in a reduced scale of 1:100 was fabricated for the collision test based on a simplified geometries of naval structures made of mild steel sheets. Similarity laws, developed particularly for structural impact, were presented and employed to predict the mechanical response of a real scale collision accident from t...
The main goal of this study was to investigate the effects of selected ship collision parameter valu...
Ship collision against rigid bodies is a very complex phenomenon and a large number of parameters ar...
The primary aim of the present study is to investigate the collision resistance and residual strengt...
Demands for water transportation modes are continuously increasing as rapid economic and industrial ...
Transporting mass products from one country to others is essential activities in industrial cycle. S...
Scaled models are important in naval engineering since actual ship size makes too expensive to test ...
A comparison is provided of the results of various methods for evaluating structure during a ship-to...
Dimensioning of bulbous bows is based on conservative and usually empirically developed Classificati...
| openaire: EC/H2020/730888/EU//RESETConsiderable advances have been made in the last decades to com...
Abstract The impact phenomenon is one of many subjects that is interesting and has become an insepar...
Offshore platforms and ship traffic can be close in proximity in some areas. This has become more li...
The finite element (FE) method is suitable as a numerical tool in the numerical analysis of, for exa...
This paper presents an analysis of the side hull in marine steel structures under accidental collisi...
The present study assesses ship hull response of a platform supply vessel due to impact from falling...
The current paper presents the results of a ship impact study conducted using various analytical app...
The main goal of this study was to investigate the effects of selected ship collision parameter valu...
Ship collision against rigid bodies is a very complex phenomenon and a large number of parameters ar...
The primary aim of the present study is to investigate the collision resistance and residual strengt...
Demands for water transportation modes are continuously increasing as rapid economic and industrial ...
Transporting mass products from one country to others is essential activities in industrial cycle. S...
Scaled models are important in naval engineering since actual ship size makes too expensive to test ...
A comparison is provided of the results of various methods for evaluating structure during a ship-to...
Dimensioning of bulbous bows is based on conservative and usually empirically developed Classificati...
| openaire: EC/H2020/730888/EU//RESETConsiderable advances have been made in the last decades to com...
Abstract The impact phenomenon is one of many subjects that is interesting and has become an insepar...
Offshore platforms and ship traffic can be close in proximity in some areas. This has become more li...
The finite element (FE) method is suitable as a numerical tool in the numerical analysis of, for exa...
This paper presents an analysis of the side hull in marine steel structures under accidental collisi...
The present study assesses ship hull response of a platform supply vessel due to impact from falling...
The current paper presents the results of a ship impact study conducted using various analytical app...
The main goal of this study was to investigate the effects of selected ship collision parameter valu...
Ship collision against rigid bodies is a very complex phenomenon and a large number of parameters ar...
The primary aim of the present study is to investigate the collision resistance and residual strengt...