The Influence of Additional Equipment to the
Ultimate Strength of FPSO
Muhammad Zubair Muis Alie
1
, Juswan
1
, Wahyuddin Mustafa
1
, Kevin Gabriel Pangalinan
1
and Nurul Inda Pratiwi
2
1
Department of Ocean Engineering, Hasanuddin University, Jalan Poros Malino km. 6 Bontomarannu,
Makassar, Indonesia
2
KTU Shipyard, Project Department, Riau, Indonesia
Keywords: FPSO, Cross Section, FEM, Ultimate Strength.
Abstract: Nowadays, there have many ship conversions, for example, from double hull tanker to Floating Production
Storage Offloading (FPSO). The conversion is conducted due to the change function of the ship. On the
other hand, due to the change function of the ship, some items of the ship, such as equipment, need to be
evaluated because of those related to the ultimate strength of the ship. The objective of the present study is
to analyze the influence of additional equipment to the ultimate strength of FPSO under vertical bending
moment for hogging condition. The cross-section of FPSO is taken by considering one-frame space. The
numerical method is used, and the Multi-Point Constraint (MPC) is applied to both sides of the cross-
section, and it is assumed to have remained plane. The shell element type is used for modeling the cross-
section. The material properties are set to be constant. As a simple calculation, the ship’s cross-section is
analyzed in intact. The additional equipment is calculated and included in the analysis to know the influence
of it. The analysis of the ultimate strength, including their influence of additional equipment, is conducted
under longitudinal bending. To compare the ultimate strength obtained by the numerical method, the
analytical method is adopted. It is found that the ultimate strength gained by the numerical method is almost
identical to the analytical method. The behavior of the ship’s cross-section is also presented in terms of
stress distribution and deformation.
1 INTRODUCTION
The conversion of a ship is implemented in recent
years. This phenomenon is mostly conducted for an
offshore structure such as from Double Hull Tanker
to Floating Storage Offloading (FSO) or Floating
Production Storage Offloading (FPSO). The
conversion aims to change the ship function and
operation, including ship payload. In some years, the
conversion from tanker to FPSO is very significant.
Time-consuming is shorter than a new design; that is
one of the reasons. On the other hand, during
conversion, some equipment must be added not only
for the ship’s function but also for the ship’s
construction. Due to this reason, the analysis of the
ultimate strength of being converted considering the
additional equipment must be taken into account.
The analysis of the ship’s strength had been
introduced by some papers like; The residual
strength of an Aframax-class double hull oil tanker
damaged in the collision had been assessed by
(Parunov, Rudan, and Bužančić Primorac, 2017)
considering the influence of the rotation of the
neutral axis. The impact of nonlinear finite element
method models on the ultimate bending moment for
hull girder was studied by (Xu and Pan 2017). There
were two analyses performed; those were implicit
static analysis and explicit dynamic analysis. A
structural reliability analysis model based on a
Bayesian belief network was proposed by (Li and
Tang, 2019) for the hull girder collapse risk after
accidents. The Bayesian belief network was used to
represent random states of variable risk events after
accidents, as well as the dependencies between
activities, and the structural reliability analysis was
used to evaluate the failure probability hull girder
for each possible accident conditions. The incidence
of collision damage models on an oil tanker and bulk
carrier reliability was investigated by (Campanile,
Piscopo and Scamardella, 2018) considering the
The Influence of Additional Equipment to the Ultimate Strength of FPSO.