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    Assessment of Offshore Platforms Under Subsidence—Part I: Approach

    Source: Journal of Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering:;2000:;volume( 122 ):;issue: 004::page 260
    Author:
    Joseph M. Gebara
    ,
    Dan Dolan
    ,
    Stuart Pawsey
    ,
    Philippe Jeanjean
    ,
    Knut Dahl-Stamnes
    DOI: 10.1115/1.1313530
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: This is the first of four companion papers that present a comprehensive assessment of the effect of sea floor subsidence on the Valhall complex of platforms. The study has included an estimate of the increase in platform failure probability as a function of increased subsidence. Subsidence raises the effective mean still water level and increases the potential for inundation of the deck for extreme storm conditions. Deck wave slam forces generate significantly greater platform loading and lead to: (a) higher levels of structural inelastic response and increased risk of structural failure as well as (b) water reaching the cellar deck, and hence affecting operators as well as equipment. The paper focuses on addressing the first of these two issues. A structural assessment study was performed to address the significance of present and future levels of subsidence on the safety of three North Sea platforms. The study included a systematic assessment procedure that addressed each of the factors that impacted structural integrity issues and reliability concerns. Such factors included: ultimate strength analysis methodologies, tubular joint formulations, group pile effects, and soil-structure interaction, which are described in this paper, as well as deck impact force formulations (Pawsey et al., 1998, “Characterization of Environmental Loads on Subsiding Offshore Platforms,” 17th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering, Lisbon, Portugal, July) component and system reliability modeling (Jha et al., 2000, “Assessment of Offshore Platforms Under Subsidence—Part II: Analysis and Results,” ASME J. Offshore Mech. Arct. Eng., 122 , pp. 267–273), and acceptance criteria (Stahl et al., 1998, “Acceptance Criteria for Offshore Platforms,” 17th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering, Lisbon, Portugal, July). This paper presents the assessment procedure, as well as the modeling approach. The paper also discusses the consequence classification of the three platforms and state-of-the-art soil mechanics techniques that lead to a significant increase in the tensile capacity of the foundation. [S0892-7219(00)00204-1]
    keyword(s): Safety , Reliability , Stress , Waves , Failure , Probability , Soil , Offshore platforms , Storms , Tensile strength , Modeling , Acceptance criteria , Force , Seabed , Structural failures AND Soil mechanics ,
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      Assessment of Offshore Platforms Under Subsidence—Part I: Approach

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/124131
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    • Journal of Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering

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    contributor authorJoseph M. Gebara
    contributor authorDan Dolan
    contributor authorStuart Pawsey
    contributor authorPhilippe Jeanjean
    contributor authorKnut Dahl-Stamnes
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:03:05Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:03:05Z
    date copyrightNovember, 2000
    date issued2000
    identifier issn0892-7219
    identifier otherJMOEEX-28158#260_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/124131
    description abstractThis is the first of four companion papers that present a comprehensive assessment of the effect of sea floor subsidence on the Valhall complex of platforms. The study has included an estimate of the increase in platform failure probability as a function of increased subsidence. Subsidence raises the effective mean still water level and increases the potential for inundation of the deck for extreme storm conditions. Deck wave slam forces generate significantly greater platform loading and lead to: (a) higher levels of structural inelastic response and increased risk of structural failure as well as (b) water reaching the cellar deck, and hence affecting operators as well as equipment. The paper focuses on addressing the first of these two issues. A structural assessment study was performed to address the significance of present and future levels of subsidence on the safety of three North Sea platforms. The study included a systematic assessment procedure that addressed each of the factors that impacted structural integrity issues and reliability concerns. Such factors included: ultimate strength analysis methodologies, tubular joint formulations, group pile effects, and soil-structure interaction, which are described in this paper, as well as deck impact force formulations (Pawsey et al., 1998, “Characterization of Environmental Loads on Subsiding Offshore Platforms,” 17th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering, Lisbon, Portugal, July) component and system reliability modeling (Jha et al., 2000, “Assessment of Offshore Platforms Under Subsidence—Part II: Analysis and Results,” ASME J. Offshore Mech. Arct. Eng., 122 , pp. 267–273), and acceptance criteria (Stahl et al., 1998, “Acceptance Criteria for Offshore Platforms,” 17th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering, Lisbon, Portugal, July). This paper presents the assessment procedure, as well as the modeling approach. The paper also discusses the consequence classification of the three platforms and state-of-the-art soil mechanics techniques that lead to a significant increase in the tensile capacity of the foundation. [S0892-7219(00)00204-1]
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleAssessment of Offshore Platforms Under Subsidence—Part I: Approach
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume122
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.1313530
    journal fristpage260
    journal lastpage266
    identifier eissn1528-896X
    keywordsSafety
    keywordsReliability
    keywordsStress
    keywordsWaves
    keywordsFailure
    keywordsProbability
    keywordsSoil
    keywordsOffshore platforms
    keywordsStorms
    keywordsTensile strength
    keywordsModeling
    keywordsAcceptance criteria
    keywordsForce
    keywordsSeabed
    keywordsStructural failures AND Soil mechanics
    treeJournal of Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering:;2000:;volume( 122 ):;issue: 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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