Houlder creates a safe and reliable upending tool to control the lifting of immense offshore wind monopiles
A tool that picks, orients and places a part is
common in machine automation. However, when it's part of a wind-farm
installation located offshore, it's a rather complex and impressive
piece of equipment (Figure 1).
Our company, Houlder,
was tasked to develop a reliable, fast and safe system to lift massive
wind-turbine steel-foundation monopiles. Each monopile, a cylindrical
steel tube support structure, weighs 855 tons and must be lifted from a
horizontal position on the deck of the installation vessel to a vertical
orientation at the target installation position in preparation for
pile-driving it into the seabed.
Our solution
required designing a wirelessly controlled crane attachment using
National Instruments’ CompactRIO and LabView. The crane attachment
automatically engages a monopile, upends it, securely suspends it and
helps precisely position it. Once the pile is in position and
restrained, the attachment is remotely disconnected from the monopile
and parks to recharge the power units. Using CompactRIO and LabView for
the pile-upending tool allowed us to rapidly and cost effectively
develop a control system that we can easily update and improve for use
on future wind-farm projects.
Houlder’s marine equipment business is located
in Tyne and Wear, England. The company is an independent,
employee-owned provider of design and engineering services, as well as
equipment used in a wide range of marine markets including offshore
renewables, oil and gas, defense and liquefied natural gas. The company
delivers turnkey solutions to engineering challenges in all these
sectors. Our engineers, naval architects, designers and project managers
do more than offer their expertise to the market. They combine forces
to bring clarity to industry challenges and present well-considered
solutions. They balance their intellect, experience and practical
knowledge.
Background breakdown
The
offshore wind farm project required two pile upending tools for
operation onboard the heavy-lift jack-up installation vessels MPI
Discovery and Swire Blue Ocean Pacific Orca. The tool lifts monopiles
that will be driven into the seabed to act as the foundation for wind
turbine generators.
We won the project due to a combination of our experience, innovation in the sector, project success rate and reliability.
Our
objective was to improve pile upending operations using a heavy lift
crane. We identified a number of engineering challenges to overcome,
including:
- controlling the upending tool pivoting and locking cylinders
- powering wireless remote communication between operator and upending tool
- monitoring of upending tool parameters
- overcoming major safety implications in the event of upending tool failure
- delivering an upending tool control system in compliance with both DNV GL rule 2.2, “Lifting appliances,” and EN ISO 13849-2, “Safety of machinery—Safety-related parts of control systems.”
Addressing these issues would result in a faster, more cost-effective, safer and more reliable monopile installation process.
Project packdown
The
upending tools comprise many parts, including a crane attachment,
flange hook, control cabinet, batteries, hydraulic accumulators,
hydraulic reservoir, hydraulic pump, rotating cylinder and locking
cylinder (Figure 2).
We developed an upending tool that is
self-powered during operations by using absorbent-glass-mat (AGM)
batteries for the control system and hydraulic accumulators and a
charging pump to provide hydraulic power for the upending tool
actuators.
The tool includes two hydraulic
actuators: a pivot cylinder and a locking cylinder. The pivot cylinder
provides rotation of the tool and locking mechanism. This allows it to
engage the horizontally positioned monopile located on the vessel deck.
The locking cylinder links mechanically to two locking latches used to
lock the upending tool in place on the monopile upper flange.
Once
the upending tool engages and is locked to the monopile upper flange,
the upending procedure continues. During pile upending, the pivot
cylinder goes into float mode so the tool can pivot freely as the pile
is lifted from horizontal to vertical. Once the pile is vertical, it is
moved to the installation position using a crane where it is restrained
using
Houlder’s Pile Gripper Arm integrated into
the stern of the vessel. The monopile is then lowered to the seabed,
where it is hammered to a final depth.
As the pile
upending tool is connected to the end of a large crane, it is linked
wirelessly to a controller. Using a handheld device, the operator can
remotely retract the latching cylinder to disengage the tool from the
pile (Figure 3).
Safety first
There are
many standards and requirements for certification of a shipboard and
offshore crane. This lifting appliance must handle cargo, the monopile,
within the vessel while at sea and move it outside the vessel for
placement in the seabed.
One certification needed
is compliance to DNV GL rule 2.2, “Lifting appliances," and there are
many parts, components and systems covered by this standard. Beyond
load-carrying structural members and other mechanical components of the
lifting appliance, there were many electrical and control parts to
comply with. This included power systems for hoisting, brakes and
braking systems, safety equipment, protection against fire, control and
monitoring systems and electrical installation.
Design
examination was a big part of the certification activities. This
included strength and suitability of purpose; surveys to confirm
compliance with the approved drawings, compliance with regulation and
standards; good workmanship and functional testing and load testing.
Compliance
with EN ISO 13849-2, “Safety of machinery—Safety-related parts of
control systems,” is also a requirement. This standard covers general
design principles and validation of safety-related parts of control
systems. This includes mechanical, pneumatic, hydraulic and electrical
technology. It also describes typical safety functions, required
performance levels and validation by analysis and testing of such.
Hardware control
We
used the CompactRIO platform to overcome many of the engineering
challenges we faced. The CompactRIO system controls the hydraulic valves
and the hydraulic power supply. It also monitors the position of the
cylinders, accumulator pressure, angle of the tool, reservoir level and
battery level. Additionally, the system controls the warning signals and
relays the information to the operator through a radio
transmitter/receiver module.
The CompactRIO system
also helps to implement safety standards. For instance, when there is a
communication error in the radio signal, it ensures all the outputs
fail safely. Similarly, the system sends a watchdog signal to a safety
relay. The tool fails safely in the case of a power outage. The
CompactRIO interfaces with the other elements of the upending-tool
design, as well.
Early in the design process, we
considered several alternative solutions to the CompactRIO. The first
solution we considered used relay logic. However, this limited
functionality and scope for future development. Alternatively, we
reviewed using a programmable logic controller (PLC) or embedded
hardware, but they lacked significant advantages compared to developing a
solution with LabView and CompactRIO.
We used
several configurable and interchangeable modules with the CompactRIO
chassis—cRIO-9075—which worked well and can be expanded in the future.
These modules included a NI-9425 digital input module, NI-9476 digital
output module, NI-9203 analog input module and NI-9263 analog output
module.
Modular software design
The
LabView development environment significantly improved the design
process in many ways. Its modular software design provided seamless
integration between software written by multiple developers. Intuitive
debugging made it is easier and faster to pinpoint errors when writing
the software.
The code is easy to reuse across
multiple projects by leveraging subVIs (virtual instruments) and
libraries. This will also reduce the engineering time for future
projects, and the numerous libraries allow fast and efficient
programming by using pre-existing functions.
The
drag-and-drop interface and easy-to-make graphical user interface also
reduced programming time. Compatibility with other programming languages
enabled the developers to program in specialized languages and use
LabView to interface them all together.
We used
the standard service program from National Instrument to help us to
complete online training and reduce training costs. National Instruments
also has specialized support engineers to help to resolve any technical
issues with hardware or software. We could also simulate the hardware.
In
addition to improving the design process, using CompactRIO alongside
LabView helped us to add important features to the project that we could
otherwise not implement. An important safety feature was to use the
CompactRIO field-programmable gate array (FPGA) as a watchdog to monitor
the safety relay. We also used the FPGA to generate
pulse-width-modulation signals for the locking latch and pivot-cylinder
hydraulic control valves to provide smoother system operation.
Through
the use of shared variables, we could remotely monitor certain
parameters. We also created personalized interfaces for different
clearance levels such as operator, service engineer, software engineer
and diagnostics checks.
A new iteration
The
main advantages of the upending tool, compared to previous solutions,
are independence from external power sources and the fact it removes the
need for human intervention during connection and disconnection. With
no slings or service lines to manage, the connection point can overhang
the vessel deck and the overall lifting and upending time can be
dramatically reduced. The key benefit of this to installation operations
is more efficient and safer use of the vessel’s heavy lift crane.
Once
the pile is in place, the tool is returned to the deck, parked and
plugged into the its power supply to charge the hydraulic accumulators
and battery while the crane is freed to carry out other operations, such
as hammering. This solution is simpler to operate and more independent,
thanks to the radio control unit replacing signal lines. Using wireless
data transfer, however, is less robust than physically connected
cables. The CompactRIO ensures that, in the event of a communication
error, there are no unexpected failures.
The tools
have now installed all 116 monopiles on the wind farm site with no
reported downtime, proving the reliability and robustness of the design.
The upending tools are now available for use in future wind-farm
projects.
No comments:
Post a Comment