MOSES - Storm Factor as per DNV-RP-H102

Hi,

What would be the way to define a Storm Factor (STF) in MOSES, following the DNV-RP-H102 rules, which state that: Hmax = STF * Hs, where STF = 2.0.

Thank you,

Berislav

Parents Reply
  • Hi Berislav,

    For probability in the frequency domain the factor for maximum is 3.72.  You can find this in the moses.cus file in the following directory.

    C:\Program Files\Bentley\Engineering\MOSES CONNECT Edition V12\data\progm

    But I think you are asking about the area under the spectrum curve.  Those equations are in the manual.  Please see section XII.G The Environment.  In my copy the equations are on page 154 and 155.

    Let me know if there are other questions.

    Georgina Maldonado

Children
  • Hi Georgina,

    Actually I think it is more related to the maximum wave height in any given spectrum that will be exceeded only once in a 3-hour storm. Following the Rayleigh probability distribution, and assuming that there will be 1000 waves in 3-hour storm, the ratio Hmax/ Hs is 1.86. 

    So in my opinion we need to create a wave elevation time signal where the Hmax will be 2.0*Hs, but coming out of the spectrum defined by Hs, Tp and gamma.

    Do you have any suggestions?

    Thanks and regards,

    Berislav

  • Well, I would have to take out the probability and statistics book I used in college.  After reviewing that and getting refreshed on the areas and moments under the curve I would start with the JONSWAP spectrum.

    I would start with a gamma of 1 and see what is the Hmax / Hs ratio. ( First confirming my understanding of what I read in the textbook.)

    Then I would change gamma and see what the ratio is and separately calculate the area and moments.

    I would include the wave elevation as part of the output.  After the analysis I would FFT the wave elevation data to confirm my calculations.

    What are your thoughts?

    georgina

  • Just my two cents.

    A classical "extreme" value for offshore operation is defined as the event with probability less than 1/1000 (the typical 3-hours storm, even if this is correct only if the wave mean period is about 11 s). From the Longuet-Higgins theoretical expression, this corresponds to a factor 1.86 that muliplies the significant value (that is exactly how the STF is defined). And the significant value is 2 times the standard deviation. So, MOSES uses, by default, a maximum value equal to 2*1.86 = 3.72.

    If you perform frequency-based analyses based on the DNV codes (the one you cite and, for instance also the DNVGL-ST-N001), you instead have to use a different factor, depending on the duration of the operation. This is rather obvious, a shorter duration corresponds to a reduced STcoefficient, and a larger duration to a larger coefficient.

    To make the story short: just use 2 * STF as maximum value factor for frequency-based analyses in moses (4.0 in your case).

    Regards

  • Thank you The Ig

    It is good to think of the problem the way you have presented it.

    georgina

  • Thank you Georgina and the ig, I agree that this is the most appropriate way to deal with the DNV requirement, especially since I am doing a frequency domain check.

    Best regards,

    Berislav