Trim Optimisation - Theory and Practice
Trim Optimisation - Theory and Practice
eu
Volume 8
on Marine Navigation
Number 3
September 2014
DOI:10.12716/1001.08.03.09
ABSTRACT: Force Technology has been working intensively with trim optimisation tests for almost last 10
years. Focus has primarily been put on the possible power savings and exhaust gases reduction. This paper
describesthetrimoptimisationprocessforalargecargovessel.Thephysicsbehindchangedpropulsivepower
is described and the analyses in order to elaborate the optimum trimmed conditions are presented. Different
methods for prediction of required power in trimmed conditions are presented and results are compared
againsteachother.Themethodswiththeiradvantagesanddisadvantagesarediscussed.Onthebasisofpower
prediction,atrimguidancewithdedicatedSeaTrimsoftwareforshipmasterismadeandpresented.
1 INTRODUCTION
Trim optimisation is one of the easiest and cheapest
methods for ship performance optimisation and fuel
consumption reduction. It does not require any hull
shape modification or engine upgrade. The
optimisation can be done by proper ballasting or
choosingofproperloadingplan.
Although trim optimisation tests are considered
less important than standard power performance
modelteststheycanprovidesubstantialsavings and
a return on investment between one and six months,
depending on vessel type, operation and number of
vesselsintheseries.Theenergysavingsasaresultof
trim optimisation have been proven also by Hansen
and Freund (2010), where the influence of water
depthonpossiblegainshasalsobeendescribed.
The trim optimisation can be made by means of
model tests or by means of computational fluid
dynamics (CFD). Some results of possible power
gainsprovenbyCFDmethodshavebeenreportedby
HansenandHochkirch(2013)andabriefcomparison
387
CT C R 1 k C F0 C A
ThetrimoptimisationguidelinesmadebyFORCE
Technologyandproceduredescribedinthispaperdo
not take into account operational constraints which
havetobeconsideredduringshipping,i.e.slamming
andgreenwaterondeck,crewcomfortzone,strength
andstability,manoeuvrabilityandoverallsafety.
2 TRIMOPTIMISATIONINTHEORY
CF0
Trimisdefinedasthedifferencebetweenthedraught
atAP TA andthedraughtatFP TF .
Trim TA TF
(1)
Thisresultsinpositivetrimtotheaft.Furthermore
when a vessel is trimmed, the displacement and
speed are kept constant, i.e. no extra ballast added
andthepowerconsumptionvariesiftheresistanceis
changedwhentrimmed.
Thetrimoptimisationobjectiveis to minimise the
required power at vessel specific displacement and
specific speed. The physical effects that reduce the
propulsivepower PD whenashipistrimmedcan
relate primarily to the hull resistance RT and to
the total propulsive efficiency D as shown in the
formulabelow:
R V
PD T
(2)
2.1 Resistancereduction
The still water ship resistance is, according to ITTC
standards,describedbythefollowingformula:
R T V 2 S CT
(3)
388
(4)
0.075
log Re 2
(5)
10
whereReistheReynoldsnumberdefinedby:
Re
V Lwl
(6)
2.2 Increaseoftotalpropulsiveefficiency
The propulsive efficiency is a product of the hull
efficiency H , the open water propeller efficiency
O andtherelativerotativeefficiency rr .
T H O rr
(7)
1 t
1 w
(8)
T RT
t
T
(9)
V VA
(10)
Asthevesselspeediskeptconstant,changesinthe
effectivewakefractioncanonlyrelatetothepropeller
inflow velocity. As expected, the effective wake
fraction increases for bow trim conditions and
decreases for stern trim conditions. The increase of
wakefractionforbowtrimscanbeupto20%andthe
decrease for stern trims can be up to 10%. The
differencesinwakefraction can therefore change the
powerdemandofupto5%.
Both thrust deduction fraction and wake fraction
for bow trim balance each other and can result in a
powergainupto2%.
The propeller open water efficiency depends on
the advance ratio J , i.e on the water inflow
velocity to propeller VA and on the revolutions
n :
VA
nD
where
(11)
D isthepropellerdiameter.
Asalreadyconcludedthepropellerinflowvelocity
isaffectedbythetrim.Sincetheopenwatercurvefor
the propeller efficiency is inclined for the actual
advance ratio, even minor changes in the advance
ratio result in a changed propulsive power. These
changes can reach up to 2% of the even keel power
demand.
rr
KQow
KQship
(12)
Itcanvaryupto2%fromevenkeelconditionand
thesamewayinfluencethepowerrequirement.
2.3 Totalpowergain
From the theory and percentage values presented
above can be concluded that the residual resistance
coefficient is the factor most affected by trim.
However,thepropulsionaffectstheresultsat a level
detectableinmodeltestsandshouldnotbeneglected.
3 TRIMOPTIMISATIONINPRACTICE
Taking into account the theory presented above,
several methods for determining the optimum trim,
which are based on different practical approach may
be used during optimisation process. The
experimentalmethodsingeneral can be divided into
threeoptions:
3.1 Fullresistanceandselfpropulsionmodeltests
Model tests performed in this method consist of full
set of resistance and selfpropulsion model tests for
eachtrimmedcondition.
Each condition is treated as an independent
propulsionpredictioncase,i.e.predictiontofullscale
is made according to FORCEs procedure. This
approach fully accounts for variation of form factor,
residual resistance coefficient and propulsive factors
(effectivewake,thrustdeductionandrelativerotative
efficiency)withdisplacement/trimvariation.Practical
drawback is the relative high experimental matrix
withassociatedincreasedcost.
3.2 Selfpropulsionmodeltestswithconstantformfactor
andconstantthrustdeductionfraction
In this method the resistance tests are performed for
reference conditions only, which in 90% of cases
means the even keel condition for each tested
displacement. Form factor and thrust deduction
fractionaretakenfromthereferencecaseandarekept
constant during trimmed conditions analyses. The
selfpropulsion tests performed for trimmed
conditions are the basis for calculation of wake
fraction and propulsive coefficients on a basis of
reverse approach. Advantages of this approach is
somewhat reduced experimental cost, but with the
disadvantage of losing the trim effect on form factor
andthrustdeduction.
389
3.3 Directpowermeasurements
The prognosis to full scale is made on the basis of
torque and revolutions measured during the self
propulsion tests at ship selfpropulsion point, i.e.
including the additional towing force for
compensation of frictional resistance between ship
andmodel.Thefullscaleprognosisismadeaccording
to Froude similarity law. This is the most
straightforward approach, simulating the full scale
ship trial procedure. There is no need of resistance,
form factor, propeller open water data, neither
propulsive factors measurement. In this approach,
however, the effective wake scaling is neglected,
which would influence propeller loading coefficient
and subsequently propeller thrust, torque and shaft
powerprediction.
4 CASESTUDYPRESENTATION
Below the results of trim optimisation for a large
cargo ship are presented. All three methods were
used and results of all methods are presented. Some
detailed analysis of form factor, residuary resistance
coefficient, wake fraction, thrust deduction fraction,
relativerotativeandopenwaterefficienciesismade.
Resultsoftrimoptimisationarepresentedintwo
ways,asamatrixofpossiblepowersavingsattested
trimmed conditions and as an optimum trim at
specificdisplacement.
4.1 Referencevessel
The vessel chosen for this study is a large container
vessel. The hull form represents a typical container
vessel with a pronounced bulbous bow, slender hull
andacentreskegwithonepropeller.
Figure1.Thrustdeductionfractionindifferentmethods
Itcanbeseenthatthethrustdeductionfractionfor
all tested trim conditions decreases with speed and
has rather large scatter. Furthermore, there is a
pronounced trim influence with deviations (relative
totheconstanttvalue)ofupto100%.
Figure 2 shows the relation between form factors
measured at different trimmed conditions and
constant form factor taken into account in method
with resistance tests made only at reference trim. In
that figure also the thrust deduction fraction from
bothmethodsfordesignspeedisshown
Table1.Mainparticularsofreferencevessel
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
Ship Model
Length,LPP 330.00 8.648
Breadth,B 42.80 1.122
Maxdraught(tested),Tmax 11.50 0.301
Volumeatmaxdraught,Vmax 104166 1.875
Blockcoefficientatmaxdraught,CB
max 0.654
0.654
_______________________________________________
Thevesselwaschosenduetoitswelldocumented
resistanceandselfpropulsionperformancebyseveral
modeltestsatFORCETechnology.Earlierithasbeen
testedinnumerouscombinationsofdraughts,speeds
and trims. In this study, only one partly loaded
draught and speeds corresponding to a Froude
number between 0.128 and 0.201 is described. Ten
differenttrimshavebeeninvestigatedrangingfrom
2.5mto2.0minstepsof0.5m.
4.2 Modeltestsresults
Figures 13 present the detailed comparison of form
factor, thrust deduction and wake fraction between
two methods, i.e full resistance and selfpropulsion
model tests for all trimmed conditions [act ff act t]
and selfpropulsion model tests with constant form
390
Figure2.Formfactorusedindifferentmethods
Figure5.Predictedpowersavingsfromdifferentmethods
Likeincaseofoptimumtrim,thetrendofpossible
power savings received from analysed methods is
very similar. The difference in values of predicted
possible power savings between the highest and
lowest possible saving received from different
methodsisalmostconstantandequaltoabout2.7%.
Figure4.Optimumtrimfromdifferentmethods
5 CONCLUSIONSONTHEOPTIMISATION
METHODS
The final conclusions may be presented in two
aspects, i.e. showing the effect of the investigated
analysismethodonthedeterminationoftheoptimum
trim condition and showing the effect of the
investigated analysis method on the possible power
savings.
If taking into account the first aspect it appears
that in the low to medium speed range (14 to 18
knots) the methods with full resistance and self
propulsion tests (act ff act t) and the one with
resistance for a reference trim only (const ff const t)
give similar results (see Figure 4). For the top speed
range, however, the act ff act t method is preferable
foritsbetteraccountofthethrustdeductionand1+k
deviationwithspeed(seeFigure1).Thedirectpower
method follows the same trend as the indirect
methods giving however the values of trim with a
smalloffset.
Regardingthepossiblepowersavingsitshouldbe
concludedthatforthemediumspeedrange(16to18
knots) the two methods, i.e. act ff act t and const ff
const t indicate similar power savings, while for the
lowandtopspeedrangesdeviationsreachupto2%.
Thus, again, the actual t and (1+k) method could be
recommended for better power saving prediction in
the entire speed range. In the direct power method,
thepredictedpowerlevelsdonotconsiderwakescale
effectandcorrelationallowancecoefficient.Therefore,
thepredictedpowersavingsaregenerallylower, but
exhibitthesametrendasthetwoothermethods.
A general comment may be concluded that the
choice on which method to use is a compromise
between possible resources both in time, in facilities
utilisation or in software, when numerical methods
instead of model tests will be used, and a satisfying
levelofaccuracy.Howeverallthreemethodscouldbe
used to predict certain power savings coming from
trimoptimisation.
391
6 SEATRIMSOFTWARE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Figure6.SeaTrimsoftware
392
REFERENCES
[1]Lemb Larsen N., Simonsen C.D., Klimt Nielsen C., Re
Holm C. (2012), Understanding the physics of trim, 9th
annualGreenShipTechnologyConference,Copenhagen,
Denmark
[2]Hansen H., Freund M. (2010), Assistance Tools for
Operational Fuel Efficiency, 9th International Conference
on Computer and IT Applications in the Maritime
Industries,COMPIT2010,Gubio,Italy
[3]Hansen H., Hochkirch K. (2013), Lean ECOAssistant
Production for Trim Optimisation, 11thInternational
Conference on Computer and IT Applications in the
MaritimeIndustries,COMPIT2013,Cortona,Italy
[4]HochkirchK.,MallolB.(2013),OntheImportanceofFull
Scale CFD Simulations for Ships, 11thInternational
Conference on Computer and IT Applications in the
MaritimeIndustries,COMPIT2013,Cortona,Italy