Contatto Editoriale:
Paolo Lista,
Lista Studio srl®
Borgo Belvigo 33, 36016 Thiene Vi ITALY
tel/fax 0445,372479 o info@lista.it
Noble Denton and Associates, Inc. (NDAI) of Houston,
Texas is an engineering consulting firm that serves the
offshore petroleum exploration and production industry,
providing services to companies worldwide. Recently the
owner of a mobile offshore drilling rig came to NDAI with
a frustrating maintenance problem. The client had noticed
on a routine inspection of the unit's steel tubular leg
structures the presence of small fatigue cracks. The
mobile rig had recently been working off of West Africa,
and was due to be moved to a new location. NDAI was asked
to isolate the source of the fatigue cracks and propose a
solution.
The platform of this drilling unit is a triangular
hull 30 feet deep and 200 feet on each side. The platform
supports a drill derrick for operations in a marine
environment. The platform is supported by jack-ups, three
legs that pass through the buoyant hull structure, via
legwells, near the three corners of the hull. These legs
are about 400 feet in length and can be lowered until
they contact the sea floor and begin to raise the
platform up until the hull bottom is higher than the
crests of the waves.
An unusual challenge
Typically, the legs of a jack-up are steel frame
structures composed of chords, vertical steel tubes
running the full length of the leg, and framed together
with horizontal and diagonal braces, creating a square
girder structure. On two of the vertical chords (on
diagonally opposite corners) are rows of teeth called
racks that run the length of the leg. The racks are
engaged by pinions with the same size teeth that are used
to drive the leg up or down. Upon departure from a site,
the legs are raised and the unit floats with the legs
reaching high above the hull, looking like an upside-down
table. With the legs so high in the air, some rocking of
the legs occurs while the rig is in motion. To keep the
legs from rotating too freely, there are guides above and
below the pinion mechanism allowing less than
one-half-inch clearance.
It was an intriguing problem, particularly since it
would call for analysing an existing structure to locate
the source of the fatigue defect. Because of this unusual
challenge, Dr. David Smith, a structural engineer with
NDAI, determined that motion analysis was needed. He had
read a review of a program called Interactive Physics II,
an educational program made by Knowledge Revolution of
San Mateo, California. When he inquired about it, he
discovered that Knowledge Revolution also made a desktop
analysis tool for industry called Working Model. He
decided to try Working Model to analyse the jack-up
problem.
Although the legs had a 360-degree range of motion
while in the raised position, Dr. Smith felt the problem
could be adequately modelled and analysed in two
dimensions because "it was clear that the movement
of the legs was fairly restricted to a 2-D plane, as the
legs would rotate on the diagonally opposed
pinions."
Sketching the mechanism
"We used Working Model to analyse the effect on
the legs by simulating the rolling motion of the
transportation barge," said Dr. Smith. Using the
Working Model Workspace, Dr. Smith sketched the key
elements of the jack-up mechanism. This was done by using
the mouse to click on a menu of items that construct the
basic elements for any motion simulation, including
springs, rods, actuators, dampers, pin joints, rigid
joints and polygons. To generate as realistic a
simulation as possible, Dr. Smith had to model a leg as a
flexible body, not as one rigid structure.
"I modelled the leg as a series of discrete
elements and put in torsional springs between the
segments to get the bending stiffness just right."
By breaking up the leg into separate sections, Dr. Smith
was able to model the flexibility of a jack-up leg
realistically as it was acted upon by the simulated wave
motions.
To re-create the jack-up mechanism, Dr. Smith modelled
the guides on either side of the legs as springs with
gaps that only became activated at certain points during
the simulation. "When the spring length was under a
certain number, it was in contact [with the leg], and
when it was over that number, there was a gap so no
spring was in effect. Then I used a separate driving
actuator to simulate the hull motions and push the whole
mechanism around." He defined the functions of each
actuator and damper from the pulldown menus and dialog
boxes that permit the user to input specific equations
for force and duration, or to select from defaults that
speed up the kinematics/dynamic analysis process.
Once the leg and jack-up mechanism were modelled to
his satisfaction, Dr. Smith concentrated on identifying
the particular forces to apply and in which combinations.
The roll of the platform while being towed actually
caused a number of different frequencies to interact upon
the legs simultaneously. The three that Dr. Smith was
most interested in were the sea wave period (which varies
with the weather); a leg's own natural swaying period in
the upright position (which, for analysis purposes,
amounted to an inverted pendulum); and the leg as a
cantilever beam (with its own characteristic bending
stiffness).
The Noble Denton engineer specified degrees and
duration of amplitude, linear air resistance, and other
parameters to apply to his simulations, again using the
easy-to-follow selections from Working Model's
"Measure" and "Windows" pulldown
selections. Dr. Smith then chose the different graphic
meters that he wanted to display beside his simulation
iterations, displaying "Net Horizontal Damper
Force," "Bending Moment," and other
specific results generated from running the simulations.
Dr. Smith was particularly interested in the torsional or
bending moment of the legs. With each simulation, the
engineer altered amplitudes and wave frequencies,
monitoring the results with the meters on screen and
outputting hard copy of this data for further study.
Confidence in results
Working Model found that the gaps between the pinion
guides and the legs themselves could not be ignored. Dr.
Smith could tell from his simulations the number of
bending cycles that occurred per hour was directly
associated with increasing fatigue damage. "Normally
the beam stresses are incredibly low when secured,"
explained Dr. Smith, "but if you have gaps in the
system, they're going to increase because the gaps allow
a good whipping action." Working Model demonstrated
that the bending stresses in the legs were amplified most
at low amplitude wave motions.For short tows, the way the
legs of the jack-up were secured had been considered
adequate, but what Dr. Smith discovered with Working
Model was the gap between the legs and the pinion guide
mechanism was still too great, and as the barge rolled in
the natural wave environment, the legs underwent more
chaotic behaviour; the legs were bouncing off the guides
first on one side and then on the other.

When examined closely with Working Model, it was clear
that the bouncing action of the unsecured legs was
unpredictable, that is, "the intervals or cycling
back-and-forth motions were not regular because of all
these varied frequencies." Ultimately, Dr. Smith and
his colleagues concluded that any gap between the legs
and the guides was unacceptable, that clamping the legs
while in transit was the only way to avoid the fatigue
problem.Working Model made it possible for NDAI to be
certain that the "guide gaps" were the problem.
In fact, there would have been no way for Noble Denton to
analyse this problem with complete confidence in the
results without a kinematics/dynamics analysis program
such as Working Model. As an example, Dr. Smith pointed
to the way he modelled the legs as flexible bodies, using
torsional springs between rigid leg masses. "If I
hadn't subdivided the beam with the rotational springs,
and just modelled it as one rigid element, I would never
have seen the high frequency bending."
Working Model performed so satisfactorily on the leg
jack-up problem that Dr. Smith and his colleagues have
plans to use its powerful analysis capabilities to test
future designs. And Noble Denton's client no longer has a
fatigue crack problem that causes equipment damage and
cuts into the oil profits. Working Model, according to
Dr. Smith, demonstrated that it is not only a fine tool
for analysing prototypical designs, but in fact makes an
excellent kinematics/dynamic diagnostic tool for existing
designs.