An Investigation into Using CFD for the Estimation of Ship Specific Parameters for the SPICE Model for the Prediction of Sea Spray Icing: Part 2—The Verification of SPICE2 with a Full-Scale Test
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35685Date
2024-10-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
A hybrid CFD–ML model for the prediction of sea spray icing, SPICE2, was developed in
Part 1 of this study in Deshpande et al., 2024. The SPICE2 model is an extension of the ML model,
SPICE, where some of the variables required for icing rate predictions: local wind speed, spray
duration, spray period, and spray flux, are computed from CFD simulations. These, along with the
air and water temperatures, and the salinity from the metocean data are used for the prediction
of icing rates at different locations on a moving vessel. The existing full-scale icing measurements
proved to be not detailed enough for the purpose of the verification of sea spray icing prediction
models and the verification of the SPICE2 required distribution of sea spray icing data on the vessel
surface in addition to the vessel design for simulation. A full-scale sea spray icing test was conducted
in 2018 by Sundsbø et al. on a fully enclosed lifeboat equipped for the Goliat field in the Barents
Sea. The 3D design of the same lifeboat, together with the corresponding metocean conditions and
ship characteristics was used for the simulation of the vessel-specific parameters required for the
verification of the icing rate and distribution prediction from the SPICE2 model against the measured
distribution of sea spray icing rates on the lifeboat surface. The availability of the 3D model of this
lifeboat, in addition to the fact that the icing measurements from this test were detailed enough to
attempt a model verification served the purpose of validating the SPICE2 model. The icing rates
measured on this lifeboat are used for the full-scale validation of the SPICE2 model that is proposed
in Part 1 of this study. It was seen that the icing rates predicted by SPICE2 concurred with 9 of
13 selected locations on the lifeboat. The ones which did not showed very little deviation from the
measurements. The icing rate and distribution prediction with SPICE2 were satisfactorily validated
against full-scale icing measurements. This is a first attempt in modelling sea spray generation using
CFD and further research into CFD for the estimation of spray flux is suggested.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Sundsbø, Deshpande. An Investigation into Using CFD for the Estimation of Ship Specific Parameters for the SPICE Model for the Prediction of Sea Spray Icing: Part 2—The Verification of SPICE2 with a Full-Scale Test. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (JMSE). 2024;12(10)Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)