Characterization of methanol power and energy systems' uncertainties and evaluation of their impact on layout design
A. Souflis-Rigas (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)
JFJ Pruijn (Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences, TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)
Austin A. Kana (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)
More Info
expand_more
Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.
Abstract
The integration of methanol power, propulsion and energy systems (PPE) generates uncertainties linked to the selection and sizing of systems, layout design and compliance with strict safety regulations. This paper argues that alternative fuels, such as methanol, should be treated as disruptive innovations, in part due to the uncertainties linked to their implementation. These uncertainties strongly connect to the PPE dimensions and the dependencies among the systems because of integration requirements. Through a model based system engineering inspired approach, the uncertainties are elucidated into relevant inputs for the proposed framework. The authors introduce an uncertainty evaluation framework that uses Monte Carlo simulations to generate the layout design space under uncertainty. The impact of uncertainty on the design is examined through a case study on the layout of a notional engine room. Multiple probability distributions for the PPE dimensions and varied logical architectures – reflecting systems dependencies – are applied to identify patterns in the generated design space. The varied logical architectures influence drastically the dominating solutions of the design space regarding the length. For a 1000-kW notional vessel, under the varied scenarios, the length of the engine room clustered in specific values while the connection costs produced wide value spectrum.