Engineer1279
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2008
- 1
Hi all,
I have a buoyancy problem that I am stuck on. As I understand stability and buoyancy if the floating structures center of gravity is above the center of buoyancy the structure will tip over and capsize. For steel anaerobic digester covers this is a typical configuration. The average skirt length is between 6 and 8 feet making the center of gravity between 3 and 4 feet. The average ballst height is 2 to 3 feet making the center of buoyancy around 1 to 1.5 feet.
This is why there is a guidance system on these covers. The number of guides depends on the size of the cover and usually have a guidance shoe at the top and bottom of the skirt.
(1) As the cover starts to tip where is the center of rotation? Is it through the center of buoyancy (this is what I think it is) or the midpoint between buoyancy and gravity?
(2) suppose there are 9 guides evenly spaces around the cover. How do I determine which guides will hit first? A 2D cad file isn't cutting it as I can't see all the guides at once. I do have a 3D file, but can't get the constraints to cooperate as I try to rotate the cover. Also, the 3D model doesn't care if the two material physically overlap so I don't know how far to rotate.
(3) Lastly, as the cover is tipping and stopped by the guides, how much force is it applying to the guide. There are two directions that I need to look at, around the axis of rotation and perpendicular to it.
I know this has been long post but I think I described what I'm looking for. Any help would be most appreciated on this topic.
Thank you,
Engineer1279
I have a buoyancy problem that I am stuck on. As I understand stability and buoyancy if the floating structures center of gravity is above the center of buoyancy the structure will tip over and capsize. For steel anaerobic digester covers this is a typical configuration. The average skirt length is between 6 and 8 feet making the center of gravity between 3 and 4 feet. The average ballst height is 2 to 3 feet making the center of buoyancy around 1 to 1.5 feet.
This is why there is a guidance system on these covers. The number of guides depends on the size of the cover and usually have a guidance shoe at the top and bottom of the skirt.
(1) As the cover starts to tip where is the center of rotation? Is it through the center of buoyancy (this is what I think it is) or the midpoint between buoyancy and gravity?
(2) suppose there are 9 guides evenly spaces around the cover. How do I determine which guides will hit first? A 2D cad file isn't cutting it as I can't see all the guides at once. I do have a 3D file, but can't get the constraints to cooperate as I try to rotate the cover. Also, the 3D model doesn't care if the two material physically overlap so I don't know how far to rotate.
(3) Lastly, as the cover is tipping and stopped by the guides, how much force is it applying to the guide. There are two directions that I need to look at, around the axis of rotation and perpendicular to it.
I know this has been long post but I think I described what I'm looking for. Any help would be most appreciated on this topic.
Thank you,
Engineer1279