surface roughness

Discussion in 'SACS SOFTWARE' started by hoangtu, May 18, 2021.

  1. hoangtu

    hoangtu Moderators Staff Member

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    Question:
    I have a question regarding to the marine growth thickness.
    In Sacs, the format input included marine growth thickness and surface roughness
    Do the thickness of a tubular will account for 03 thick (tubular + marine growth thickness + surface roughness) for wave force calculation?
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    Answer:
    Yes, the thickness of tubular added with marine growth is used for the wave+current load calculations. The surface roughness factor [k] is used to adjust the Cd and Cm values accordingly [as per water depths indicated in the card], unless a constant value specified in the same card. For a normal offshore structure diameter range, the drag coefficient [Cd] values are adjusted on the higher side nearing high tide zone [MWL], hence, a higher ‘k’ value is adopted. Generally, as Cd increases with surface roughness, Cm decreases for these type of structures [drag dominated]. Both Reynolds Number and Keulegan-Carpenter Number [flow parameters] plays a vital role in determining so.
    SACS uses the marine growth override card [MGROV] to define marine growth and indicates that the marine growth are not the part of structural analysis [no stiffness effect].
     

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