Installation design of a large tubular caisson in the spatially varying seabed

被引:0
|
作者
Zhang, Y. [1 ]
Li, S. [1 ]
Li, H. [2 ]
Li, K. [2 ]
Han, M. [3 ]
机构
[1] State Key Laboratory of Hydraulic Engineering Simulation and Safety, School of Civil Engineering, Tianjin University, 135 Yaguan Road, Jinnan District, Tianjin,300350, China
[2] CNOOC Installation Company, CNOOC Limited, No.25, Chaoyangmenbei Dajie, Dongcheng District, Beijing,100010, China
[3] Imperial Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, London,UK,SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Pressure vessels - Soils - Installation - Probability distributions - Caissons - Monte Carlo methods - Intelligent systems - Foundations;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The installation of large steel tubular caissons, used as protection for underwater production systems, is still a challenge. To evaluate the reliability of installation, soil spatial variability is accounted for in this study through two-dimensional random field establishments and Monte Carlo simulation. As vertical random parameters are identified by field CPT data, the effect of the horizontal scale of fluctuation (δh) is explored, which becomes significant due to the extremely large diameter of the caisson. Probability distributions of self-weight penetration, inclination angle, and the ultimate soil resistance with various δh are derived from conventional installation analyses with spatially varying soil domains. It shows that increasing δh reduces the likelihood of over-tilt, yet raises the possibility of vibratory drivability refusal (failure probability). The effect of stiffeners during caisson installation is also studied, including an increase in penetration resistance and failure probability. This analysis sheds light on the impact of the soil correlation distance as well as caisson stiffeners and is useful to the reliable installation design of the large tubular caisson, particularly in layered soil. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Installation design of a large tubular caisson in the spatially varying seabed
    Zhang, Y.
    Li, S.
    Li, H.
    Li, K.
    Han, M.
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2022, 246
  • [2] Geotechnical Performance of Suction Caisson Installation in Multi-layered Seabed Profiles
    Mehravar, M.
    Harireche, O.
    Faramarzi, A.
    ENERGY GEOTECHNICS, SEG-2018, 2019, : 467 - 474
  • [3] Suction caisson installation in sand with isotropic permeability varying with depth
    Harireche, Ouahid
    Mehravar, Moura
    Alani, Amir M.
    APPLIED OCEAN RESEARCH, 2013, 43 : 256 - 263
  • [4] Large deformation analysis of suction caisson installation in clay
    Zhou, Hongjie
    Randolph, Mark F.
    CANADIAN GEOTECHNICAL JOURNAL, 2006, 43 (12) : 1344 - 1357
  • [5] Bearing capacity of spudcan foundations in a spatially varying clayey seabed
    Li, Li
    Li, Jinhui
    Huang, Jinsong
    Gao, Fu-Ping
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2017, 143 : 97 - 105
  • [6] Design, construction, and installation of a floating caisson used as a bridge pier
    Chakrabarti, SK
    Chakrabarti, P
    Krishna, MS
    JOURNAL OF WATERWAY PORT COASTAL AND OCEAN ENGINEERING-ASCE, 2006, 132 (03): : 143 - 156
  • [7] Large deformation finite element analysis of the installation of suction caisson in clay
    Wang, Yin
    Zhu, Xingyun
    Lv, Yang
    Yang, Qing
    MARINE GEORESOURCES & GEOTECHNOLOGY, 2018, 36 (08) : 883 - 894
  • [8] Probabilistic investigations on the elastic stiffness coefficients for suction caisson considering spatially varying soils
    Cheng, Po
    Hu, Yao
    Yao, Kai
    Fu, Yong
    Liu, Yong
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2023, 289
  • [9] Uplift Behavior of Pipelines Buried at Various Depths in Spatially Varying Clayey Seabed
    Cheng, Po
    Guo, Jia
    Yao, Kai
    Liu, Chaofan
    Liu, Xiushui
    Liu, Fei
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (13)
  • [10] Determination of limiting cavity depths for offshore spudcan foundations in a spatially varying seabed
    Yi, Jiang Tao
    Pan, Yu Tao
    Huang, Li Ying
    Xu, Shi Jie
    Liu, Yong
    Phoon, Kok Kwang
    MARINE STRUCTURES, 2020, 71