Design Margin of Composite Structures of Korean Fishing Vessel and Assessment of Its Environmental Impact

被引:0
|
作者
Han, Zhiqiang [1 ]
Jang, Jaewon [1 ]
Oh, Daekyun [2 ]
机构
[1] Department of Ocean System Engineering, Graduate School, Mokpo National Maritime University, Mokpo,Jeollanam-do,58628, Korea, Republic of
[2] Department of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering, Mokpo National Maritime University, Mokpo,Jeollanam-do,58628, Korea, Republic of
关键词
Laminated composites - Global warming - Fishing vessels - Life cycle - Plates (structural components) - Fisheries - Ozone layer;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Small vessels of GT (gross ton) 30 or below account for 90 percent of all registered vessels in Korea, most of which are built from composite materials. Recently several efforts have been made to reduce the amount of greenhouse gas emitted from such small vessels; however, they are mainly ineffective as they are not compulsory like the emission regulations from IMO MARPOL. This study aims to evaluate design margins of Korean composite fishing vessels by comparing the Korean rules on small composite vessel designs to other related international rules. This study also aims to quantitatively show how reducing the design margins can help make small composite vessels more environmentally friendly. This study showed that the Korean rules were not taking into account the fiber weight fraction of composite laminated plate, which determines physical properties of the plate. The Korean rules also failed to consider the effect of hull shape and structural layout on the design load of a vessel. As a result, design margins in Korean rules were slightly larger than that of other international regulations. This difference in design margins was proven to contribute to the global warming and the depletion of ozone layers. © 2020, Editorial Office of Ship Building of China. All right reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:90 / 100
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Evaluation of a gradient sampling design for environmental impact assessment
    Joanne I. Ellis
    David C. Schneider
    Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 1997, 48 : 157 - 172
  • [22] ENVIRONMENTAL-IMPACT ASSESSMENT FOR PLANT DESIGN AND OPERATION
    JONES, RL
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 1974, 66 (05): : 286 - 290
  • [23] Network Structures and Project Complexity in Environmental Impact Assessment Outcomes
    Salazar, John
    Guevara, Jose
    Castelblanco, Gabriel
    CONSTRUCTION RESEARCH CONGRESS 2024: SUSTAINABILITY, RESILIENCE, INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEMS, AND MATERIALS DESIGN IN CONSTRUCTION, 2024, : 127 - 137
  • [24] Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of marine structures - A case study
    El Gohary, Rasha
    Hassan, Nagy A. A.
    KSCE JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2012, 16 (05) : 689 - 698
  • [25] Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of marine structures — A case study
    Rasha El Gohary
    Nagy A. A. Hassan
    KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering, 2012, 16 : 689 - 698
  • [26] Environmental impact assessment of underground multi-functional structures
    Bobylev, N
    Fedorov, A
    NORTH AMERICAN TUNNELING 2002, 2002, : 133 - 138
  • [27] Fatigue reliability design and assessment of reactor pressure vessel structures: Concepts and validation
    Niu, Xiao-Peng
    Zhu, Shun-Peng
    He, Jin-Chao
    Ai, Yang
    Shi, Kaikai
    Zhang, Liping
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FATIGUE, 2021, 153 (153)
  • [28] Seismic Impact on Building Structures: Assessment, Design, and Strengthening
    Rupakhety, Rajesh
    Gautam, Dipendra
    BUILDINGS, 2024, 14 (06)
  • [29] Impact response and crashworthy design of composite fuselage structures: An overview
    Liu, Xiaochuan
    Bai, Chunyu
    Xi, Xulong
    Zhou, Sicong
    Zhang, Xinyue
    Li, Xiaocheng
    Ren, Yiru
    Yang, Jialing
    Yang, Xianfeng
    PROGRESS IN AEROSPACE SCIENCES, 2024, 148
  • [30] A novel structure design of braided composite pressure vessel and its mechanical analysis
    Liu, Gongtian
    Gao, Hongfen
    Wei, Gaofeng
    Ma, Yumeng
    JOURNAL OF THE TEXTILE INSTITUTE, 2019, 110 (01) : 124 - 133