Design of Korean Standard Modular Buoy Body Using Polyethylene Polymer Material for Ship Safety

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 588KB)  PP. 65-73  
DOI: 10.4236/msce.2016.41011    4,562 Downloads   6,945 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Buoy is the structure which is floated on sea surface in order to indicate the presenting obstacle such as reef and shallow sea and to show the direction of sea route to ship during sailing. Generally, the conventional material of buoy is steel and it has some problems. Firstly this steel light buoy has safety risk in case of collision between ship and steel buoy. Secondly steel buoy revealed high corrosion environment of salted water and oxide and corrosion of steel can lead to marine pollution. Thirdly it needs too much maintain cost because of its heavy weight. In this study, in order to overcome these problems we changed the buoy material from conventional steel body to polyethylene body. Polymer buoy body was designed with module type part and it can reduce total weight up to 43.12%. To evaluate the strength of that part, the structure analysis simulation was carried out with respect to stress, displacement, and strain. Maximum stress was 1.667 × 107 N/m2 and it was 25% of yielding stress of base material. Maximum displacement and strain were 3.164 mm and 0.00433353 and they are too small value and in safe range with comparing to total length of body. The stability of polymer buoy body was compared with conventional buoy with respect to center of gravity, center of buoyancy, metacenter, oscillation period, and tilt angle by wind, tidal current, and wave. Every value was improved comparing conventional one and we can get more stable buoy. Therefore the new polymer buoy body could prove its safety and stability.

Share and Cite:

Park, Y. , Kim, T. , Kwak, J. , Kim, I. , Park, J. and Ha, K. (2016) Design of Korean Standard Modular Buoy Body Using Polyethylene Polymer Material for Ship Safety. Journal of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, 4, 65-73. doi: 10.4236/msce.2016.41011.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.