This was self evident to me four
decades ago and the only question to me was why it was not been done. The only reason that made much sense was that
compressor technology itself stunk. It
still stinks, but a 500,000 ton container ship can afford to use jet engines to
get the job done along with a simple conduit along the hull to allow escapement.
And yes, parallel thin strips may help in slowing layer losses.
At worst a portion of the natural
friction will be released.
Even better may be to simply deal with
the bow itself to reduce its drag and allow normal momentum entrainment to keep
the rest of the hull happy. It is not as
if these displacement hulls have any plans for increasing actual speed.
Actually placing a pair of bow props
inside a driving channel could also be beneficial inasmuch as it would
accelerate bow water under the hull and eliminate much of the bow wave drag. On the other hand, I do not think it is
significant enough, and air bubbles may be easier and cheaper.
At least they are paying attention
today to the possibilities.
Airships of the sea
Naval architecture: Blasting a cushion of
air bubbles under a moving vessel’s hull can reduce its fuel consumption
Dec 9th
2010 | from PRINT EDITION
IF YOU
blow a lot of air bubbles under a ship, and keep them coming, “good things will
happen”, says Steven Ceccio, an expert on bubbles at the University
of Michigan ’s mechanical-engineering
department in Ann Arbor .
When air is pumped rapidly out of small holes in a ship’s hull, the swarming
bubbles will quickly join together and coat the hull with a layer of air a
centimetre or two thick. This reduces drag, because air offers far less
resistance than water.
As the
ship moves forward, the layer of air slides back and out from under the hull.
But blowing more bubbles to replenish it does not require much energy, so fuel
savings of 5-10% are within reach, says Dr Ceccio. He studies air-lubrication
systems, as the field is known, for the American navy, even though warships
generally have V-shaped hulls, which facilitate fast travel but are unfriendly
to bubbles. Almost all cargo vessels, by contrast, have flat bottoms, which
allow a larger volume to be kept buoyant for a given amount of hull metal.
Bubbles work well on these and, since the cost of fuel is often more than half
of a cargo ship’s total operating expenses, the potential savings are huge.
Bubbles
are wont to slip past the edges even of flat hulls, but efforts to hold them in
place are paying off, says Uwe Hollenbach of the Hamburg Ship
Model Basin ,
a facility that tests new naval technologies. One trick is to trap the blanket
of air between two ridges that protrude a few centimetres downward from the
port and starboard edges of the hull. Another is to shape the vessel’s stern in
a way that stops air being sucked into the propeller, where it would reduce
thrust by lessening the propeller’s grip on the water. It is also possible to
design hulls that include air-trapping recesses a couple of metres deep.
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