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Chapter03











3       cargo
compartment systems

Cargo compartment systems on gas carriers are
divided into groups and types. The group division indicates how the cargo tanks
transfer dynamic strength to the vessel hull. Cargo tanks that will be used on
gas carriers must at all times have a documented strength and certification of
welded joints and steel quality. The cargo tanks on gas carriers are rarely a
direct part of the hull, but rather tanks installed into the hull and isolated
from the hull.

Gas carriers are built with two or more
spaces where the cargo tanks are installed. The space where the cargo tank is
installed is called hold space. How
much hold space volume the cargo tank absorbs depends on the cargo tankłs
shape. Cargo tanks isolated from the hull, for example, cylinder tanks, must be
electrically grounded with a wire or steel strip to the hull.

 




Table showing connection between cargo temperature and type
of compartment and secondary barrier requirement




 




Cargo temperature at atmospheric pressure


- 10oC and above


Below -10oC down to
55oC


Below -55oC




Basic tank type


No secondary barrier required


Hull may act as secondary barrier


Separate secondary barrier where
required




 




Integral


 


Tank
type not normally allowed




Membrane


 


Complete
secondary barrier




Semi-membrane


 


Complete
secondary barrier




Independent


 


 




Type
A


 


Complete
secondary barrier




Type
B


 


Partial
secondary barrier




Type
C


 


No
secondary barrier required




Internal
insulation


 


 




Type
1


 


Complete
secondary barrier




Type
2


 


Complete
secondary barrier is incorporated




 

Cargo tanks that are built for fully
refrigerated gas carriers, and tanks with MARVS less than 0,7 bars, must at all
times have full or partly secondary barrier. Secondary barrier is a tank or
hull construction built outside the cargo tank itself, either in the insulation
between cargo tank and hull, or in the hull around the cargo tank. If the hull around the cargo tank is used,
it will be the ballast tank, ships side or cofferdams that is the secondary barrier. When utilising the hull around the cargo
tank as the secondary barrier the vessel is limited as it will not have the
capability to transport cargo colder than
55oC.

Secondary barrier
will prevent cargo liquid from any possible leaks coming from the cargo tank
cooling the environment around the cargo tank, for example the ship sides. The
secondary barrier must have a construction that, at a minimum, keeps the cargo
liquid away from the surroundings for at least 15 days and maintains its full
function at static lurch of 30o.

All cargo tanks on gas carriers are
constructed to a given excess pressure and vacuum. The safety valvełs maximum
allowed set point, called MARVS, is stated in accordance to
specification and pressure test, stated by the manufacturer of the cargo tank.
The tolerance of vacuum on the cargo tanks is stated in bars, kg/cm2 or
percentage of vacuum. MARVS and vacuum for each cargo tank must be specified in
the vessels “Certificate of Fitness".

US Coast Guard has more stringent rules for
safety margins for pressure tanks than IMO, this indicates that cargo
compartment on gas carriers have different MARVS pressures for IMO and USCG.

In hold spaces and inter barrier spaces there
are demands for an own bilge system that is independent from the vesselłs other
bilge systems. This is arranged with independent ejectors or bilge pumps in the
spaces and usually one in each side of the space. Inter barrier space is the
space between the cargo tank and the secondary barrier.

The bilge arrangement is meant to pump out
the cargo if there has been a leakage from the cargo tank. The system can also
be utilised to remove water from the hold space or inter barrier space if there
is accumulation of condensed water. If we have to pump water we must be sure
that all connections to the loading system is disconnected.

On atmospheric pressure tankers, hold space
and inter barrier space must at all times have a neutral atmosphere, either by
dry inert or nitrogen when loaded with flammable cargo.

Nitrogen or dry air must be utilised when the
cargo content is Ammonia or non-flammable cargo. When the cargo is Ammonia one must under no circumstance utilise
inert containing CO2 in the spaces, because Ammonia has a reaction
on CO2 and form a material called Ammonium Carbamate

 

IMO divides the cargo tanks into 4 main
groups:

 


Integrated tanks
Membrane tanks
Semi - Membrane tanks
Independent tanks, type A, B, and C
 


The characteristics of integrated, membrane
and semi membrane tanks is that they all transfer static stress in the form of
tank pressure to the hull around the cargo tank when this is loaded. Independent tanks only transfer the weight
of the cargo tank and the cargo to the hull fundamentals, but does not transfer
static pressure.

 

 

 

3.1    Integrated tanks

The first cargo compartment system we will
look at is integrated cargo tanks.
It is the same type of cargo compartment that we have on oil tankers,
OBO carriers and product tankers. The
cargo tank is an integrated part of the hull so the hull absorbs the weight and
pressure from the cargo. This type of
cargo compartment is less suited and rarely approved for gas
transportation. If we transport cargo
colder than
10oC, this type of cargo compartment is not approved.
Then low temperature steel in the cargo compartment is required. International rules also require a minimum
distance from the ship's side to the cargo tank of 760 mm for guiding of toxic
or flammable cargo. This prevents
pollution from collision or run grounding.


 

Example of integral tank



 

3.2         Membrane tanks

Membrane compartment are divided into two
groups, membrane tank system and semi- membrane tank system. Membrane tank
system is built up with two equal membranes, while semi-membrane system have a
membrane against the cargo and metal or veneer as secondary barrier. Common for
all membrane tanks is that there is no centre bulkhead for reducing the free
liquid surface, but is built up with a trunk for narrowing the tanks up against
the top of the tank.

 

3.2.1  Membrane tank system

Membrane tank
is a cargo tank built of thin plate of invar steel, stainless steel or ferro
nickel steel with a content of 36% nickel. Characteristic for these types of
steel is a very small thermal expansion coefficient approximate equal 0. The
tank shell and the secondary barrier are built in profiles formed as a
membrane; this renders the material thickness small and no more than 10 mm
thick. The membrane thickness is normally of 0,5 to 1,2 mm. There is insulation
between the secondary membrane and the hull. The insulation is often perlite
filled in plywood boxes, placed outside each other like building blocks, or
polyurethane gradually sprayed directly on as the tank is built up. The hull takes up all weight from the cargo,
and the membrane takes up the thermal expansion. Normal excess pressure for
such cargo tanks is 0,25 bars, and there are demands for secondary
barrier.

We can utilise the hull as secondary barrier
for cargo temperatures down to
55oC, but we must utilise low
temperature steel in the hull round the cargo tank. Frequently ballast tanks or
cofferdams form the hull structure around the cargo tank. For cargo colder than

55oC a tank must be placed into the insulation as secondary
barrier. French Gaz-Transport patent utilise two identical membranes outside
each other as primary and secondary barriers, with 36% nickel steel or invar
steel. The insulation in Gaz-Transport patent is perlite filled with plywood
boxes.

Technigaz membrane system utilises stainless
steel in the main membrane and veneer in the secondary membrane. The main
membrane is welded together of small plates by a special shaping so that the
tank tolerates expansion, the plate thickness is about 1,2 mm. The first tanks
from Technigaz utilized veneer plates, as secondary barrier and balsa as
insulation. Polyester-coated aluminium foil is now utilised as secondary
barrier, and polyurethane foam for insulation. These tank types are utilised on
large LNG and LPG tankers.

 

3.2.2  Sketch
on membrane tank

 



 

3.3         
Semi - membrane tanks

These are tanks used on large LPG tankers. Semi-membrane tanks are
built up with an inner tank, insulation, membrane and insulation against hull.
It is the membrane that takes up the thermal expansion. The tanks are built of
aluminium, ferro nickel steel with 36% nickel, or built of stainless steel. The
insulation is mostly perlite, but can also be polyurethane or polystyrene. The
hull absorbs all dynamic loads from the cargo tank when the tank is loaded.
Normal excess pressure for such cargo tanks is 0,25 bars, and there is a demand
for secondary barrier.

One can use the hull as secondary barrier for
cargo temperature down to
55oC, but one must utilise low
temperature steel in the hull around the cargo tank. One can also place a tank
into the insulation as secondary barrier. One cannot utilise the hull as
secondary barrier for temperature colder than
55oC. A membrane
inside is then built in the insulation as secondary barrier. This tank type was
designed for LPG transportation, but no LPG tankers are built with this tank
type. In recent years, Japanese yards have started to utilise this tank type on
large LPG tankers.

3.3.1 
Example of semi-membrane tank



3.3.2  Cross-section
of gas tanker with membrane tank



  

3.4         
independent tanks

Independent cargo compartment is cargo tanks
that do not transfer the pressure loads to the hull when they are loaded.
Therefore, only the tank weight is transferred to the cradles or the support
points in the hull. The cargo tanks are built with support to prevent the tank
from slipping forward, astern, to the side or floating up.

Independent tanks
are divided into three types: A, B and C. This division distinguishes between
the pressure the tank must tolerate and the demands for secondary barrier. Independent
tank Type A has the weakest strength of the independent tanks, and
there are demands for full secondary barrier. Independent tank type B has
greater strength than type A does, and only demands a partly secondary barrier.
Independent
tank type C is a pressure tank with no demands for secondary
barrier.

 

3.4.1   
Independent tanks type A



Independent tank type A could be a prismatic
tank and built in 3,5% nickel steel, coal manganese steel or aluminium. The
material is a recognised standard, steel quality approved by the class
companies. This type of cargo tank is utilised for carrying LNG, LPG and
ammonium.

This type of tanks is built for excess
pressure less than 0,7 bars. Normal operating pressure is 0,25 bars. The cargo
tanks are mounted on building blocks so the tank can expand freely. On top of
the tanks and in the ship side or up under deck, brackets are welded to prevent
the tank from floating up.

 

3.4.2   
Example of “anti float" brackets


A full secondary barrier for this type of tank
is required. On LPG tankers designed for minimum temperature of
48oC,
the hull is generally used as secondary barrier as low temperature steel is
used in the hull construction around the cargo tank. If the hull is not
utilised as secondary barrier an extra tank around the main cargo tank are
constructed. This is done by building a
tank of veneer plates around the cargo tank with polyurethane foam as
insulation in between. One can also use nitrogen or inert between the tanks as
insulation.

3.4.3    
Independent
tanks type B

Independent tank type B is a prismatic
tank, spherical tank or membrane tank. These tanks are designed and model tested, and they have better
quality than type A tanks. This tank
type is used for large LPG and medium-sized tankers.

 



Prismatic tanks are produced in aluminium or 3%
nickel steel in stiff plates. The tanks rest on reinforced plywood supports for
free expansion. The tanks are normally provided with centreline bulkhead to
reduce the free liquid surface. The tanks are insulated with polyurethane or
perlite. Submerged pumps or deepwell pumps are utilised as discharging

pumps.

 

 

Spherical tanks produced by Moss-Rosenberg
patent are produced in aluminium or 9% nickel steel. The tanks are supported
with cargo tank shirt at equator and down to the hull. Around the tank that is
above deck there is a waterproof cover. The tanks are equipped with submerged
pumps.

Polyurethane is often utilised as foam on
type B tanks as insulation; this is sprayed directly on the tank shell. Other
types of insulation are polystyrene plates placed in layers, or perlite either
filler around the tank or placed in small veneer cases. The insulation on spherical tanks is spinned
on from the bottom and up.



3.4.4  Independent
tanks type C

Independent tanks, type C are either spherical tanks or
cylinder tanks. The tanks are built in carbon manganese steel, 2
5 % nickel
steel or acid-proof stainless steel. This type of tank has a large rate of
security, and therefore does not need secondary barrier. This tank type is
utilised for fully pressurised gas carriers and semi-pressurised gas carriers.

Tanks type C utilised on gas carriers are
built in sizes from 300 m3 to 2500 m3.



Either submerged or deepwell pumps are
utilised as discharge pumps.

The tanks are stored on cradles and welded to
one of the cradles. The other cradle functions as a support for the tank to
expand freely. Some patents keep the tanks down in the cradles by steel bands
that are extended over the tank and fastened to the cradle. Another patent is
to weld “anti float" brackets on top of the cargo tank and up under deck to
prevent the tank from floating up. Tanks designed for cargo colder than
10oC
must have insulation. Normally
polyurethane or polystyrene is utilised as insulation.

The insulation is either sprayed directly or
placed on in blocks on the cargo tank. The thickness of the insulation is
dependent of the quality of the insulation material and the temperature of the
cargo. The thickness of the insulation on tanks that carry ethylene is about
200 mm.

 

3.5         
Types of gas carriers

Gas carriers are tankers constructed for
transporting liquefied gases in bulk.
IMO defines liquefied gases as products with a vapour pressure exceeding
2,8 bar absolute at a temperature of 37,8oC. Gas carriers
are built according to IMOÅ‚s Gas Codes. There are three versions of gas codes;
the first deals with existing gas carriers and passes for gas carriers
delivered before 31st of December 1976. The next code passes for gas carriers delivered on or after 31st
of December 1976, but before 1st of July 1986. The third gas code,
IGC Code passes for gas carriers started or the keel set after the first of
July 1986. The latest gas code is for gas carriers that keel is laid and 1% of
the construction mass is used on 1st October 1994.

The gas code has a content in demands for
damage stability, gas tankers cargo handling equipment, cargo tanks, steel
qualities in cargo tanks, pipe systems for cargo handling, personnel
protection, safety valves, etc.

Gas carriers are divided into three main
groups and four types. The gas carrier owner decides which group and type the
carrier should have, according to the freight the vessel will trade.

The three main groups are:

 

·     
Fully
pressurised carriers: designed for excess pressure in the cargo tank above11
bar.

·     
Semi-pressurised
carriers: designed for excess pressure the cargo tank on 0,5
11 bars, the
pressure is normally 3
5 bars.

·     
Fully
refrigerated carriers: designed for excess pressure in the cargo tank below 0,7
bars, the pressure is normally 0,25
0,3 bars.

 

Each of the groups is again divided into ship
types dependent on the cargo's hazardous properties (i.e.: toxicity,
flammability, reactivity etc.). It is the ship ownerłs specification of the gas
carrier, the international rules determined by IMO, national rules and class
companies rules that decide to which group and ship type the carrier belongs.

All gas carriers classed according to IMO IGC
Code for transportation of gases mentioned in chapter 19, is given one of the
following description types: 1G, 2G, 2PG or 3G. Ship type 1G is the type that can carry all cargoes mentioned in
chapter 19 of the IGC Code, and has the largest rate of security to avoid
pollution of the environment.

Ship type 1G is a gas carrier that can carry
all products mentioned in chapter 19 in the IGC Code, and requires largest rate
of security to prevent leakage from the product to the surroundings.

Ship type 2G is a gas carrier that can carry
the products marked in 2G, 2PG and 3G in chapter 19 in the IGC Code, and that
requires defensible security to prevent leakage of the product.

Ship type 2PG is a gas carrier of 150 meters
or less that can carry the products marked 2PG or 3G in chapter 19 in the IGC
Code, and that requires defensible security to prevent leakage of the product.
Also, where the product is transported in independent tanks type C, which are
designed for MARVS of at least 7 bars. Then, the cargo tank system is
calculated for temperatures of
55oC or warmer. Gas tankers of 150
meters or more, but with the same specification, as 2PG ships must be
calculated as 2G ships.

Ship type 3G is a gas carrier that can carry
the products marked 3G in chapter 19 in the IGC Code, and that requires
moderate security to prevent leakage of the product.

The ship type is reported in column c in
chapter 19 in the IGC Code.

The type of gas carrier is specified in the
vessels IMO Certificate of Fitness. On the certificate, there is also a product
list of which products the vessel can carry. The type description of the gas
carrier is given by the year when the keel was laid and the cargo tanks
distance from ship side, damage stability, floating capability and of what
material the cargo tank is made.

As an example on ship type 1G, the cargo tank
must lie at least B/5 parts up to 11,5 meters from the ship side. From the
bottom plate and up to the tank no less than 2 meters or B/15 parts. B is equal
to the vessel breadth. This type of carrier must tolerate any damage to the
ship side along the whole shipłs length. All information of the demands made
for the different ship types is located in IMO Gas Code, and all gas tankers
must have this publication onboard.

 



 

3.6 Fully pressurised carriers

Fully pressurised gas carriers were the first
generation of gas carriers that were built to transport liquefied gases in
bulk. This type of gas carrier trades mostly where LPG is consumed as energy,
such as house heating and cooking etc. The trade area is often limited to near
coastal waters. This type of gas carrier is still built, but is built to be
more modern with discharging pumps in cargo tanks and indirect cargo cooling
plant for more flexible cargo handling. We divide this type of gas carrier into
two, one for LPG trade and one for Chlorine trade.

 

3.6.1  Fully
pressurised LPG carriers

This type of gas carrier is the type that in
proportion to displacement can carry the lowest weight of cargo, this because
it is transported under pressure at the surrounding temperature, “ambient".
When the tank pressure increases the cargołs temperature also increases and the
density of the liquid will be lower. The cargo tank construction itself is
heavy as these are built of common ship steel with a thick tank shell to endure
high pressure. There are no requirements for insulation of the cargo tanks
because these carriers are not allowed to transport cargoes with temperature
colder than
10oC.

 

 

These gas carriers are built in sizes up to
about 3000 m3, and are built for an excess pressure corresponding to
an ambient temperature of 45oC. Propane has a saturation pressure of
17,18 bars at 50oC. IMO has a requirement when building fully
pressurised tanks that they must be able to bear ambient (surroundings
temperature) cargo with a temperature on 45oC. The type of cargo
determines the excess pressure for which the tanks must be built. Normally,
fully pressurised carriers LPG have a relief valve setting at 18 bars,
consequently, they can also carry propylene in tropical waters.

This type of gas carrier is easy to operate,
because the cargo does not need to be cooled down on the sea voyage. To prevent
vapour into the atmosphere when loading, they can remove the excess vapour by
having vapour return to shore. Fully pressurised gas carriers donłt need
discharge pumps in the cargo tanks, because the excess tank pressure will
discharge the liquid to shore. Hot gas from shore can be used to hold the
excess pressure in the cargo tank. If there is no utilisation of the
discharging pumps while discharging, the cargo tankłs excess pressure must at
all time be higher than the shore backpressure.

Some fully pressurised gas carriers are
equipped with booster pump(s) (auxiliary pump) on deck. This pump is used to
discharge against a higher pressure than the excess pressure in the cargo
tanks. Booster pump is a one-stage centrifugal pump installed on deck close to
the ship manifold. Normally a booster pump manages to increase the pressure up
9 bars. If the cargo tankłs pressure is 7 bars, then we can manage 16 bars on
the discharge line with the booster pump. We must bear in mind that when
running the booster pump against maximum pressure, the flow through the pump is
very low. We must always prime the booster pump before starting it, generally
by draining the discharge line to the ventilation mast. It is the pressure in
the shorelines that determines the manifoldłs pressure and whether we should
use the booster pump or not.

Fully pressurised gas carriers are equipped
with a heat exchanger (cargo heater) connected to the loading lines with vales
and spool piece (adapter). When the heat exchanger is not in use it is
segregated from the liquid line. The heat exchanger is used when we are loading
a cargo with temperature below 0oC, for example, propane at
atmospheric pressure corresponding to
42,8oC directly into the
vessels cargo tanks. Then the cargo has to be heated to above
10oC
before we load it down to the cargo tank.

Fully pressurised gas carriers have a small
cargo compressor to produce excess pressure in the cargo tanks or remove over
pressure from the cargo tanks. Vapour is sucked from the cargo tanks to the
compressor, and hot vapour is returned back to the cargo tanks. These
compressors are in general small, and are utilised only for holding the
temperature on the cargo.

Fully pressurised gas carriers are
constructed with independent tank type C, cylindrical or spherical tanks. These
are tanks installed on “cradle-like" supports down in the hold space (the space
around the cargo tank), and the ship hull doesnłt recover dynamic loads from
the cargo tanks.

Actual cargo for fully pressurised carriers
is LPG and some chemical gases. The kind of cargo each vessel can carry is
stated in the vesselłs IMO Certificate of Fitness. Fully pressurised gas
carriers are most utilised for carrying of ambient LPG and some chemical gases
as propylene, mainly in the Far East, South America, the Caribbean and The
Mediterranean.

 

Advantages:

 

·     
Easy to
operate because all discharging takes place without pumps.

·     
Low
costs in building because common steel is utilised in the cargo tanks.

·     
Low
costs for maintenance, because there is little mechanical utility equipment for
cargo handling.

·     
Simple
discharging/loading equipment on deck.

·     
No
insulation of tanks or liner, no need in maintenance of the insulation, and one
can easily inspect the cargo tanks and the lines from the outside.

·     
Transporting
the cargo by surrounding temperature (ambient), no cooling of the cargo gives
low energy consumption.

 

Disadvantages:

 

·     
Small
amount of cargo in proportion to displacement as the cargo is transported
ambient.

·     
Limited
trade area because of dependence of discharging to pressure tanks on
shore.

·     
Limited
cargo volume because the tankers are not built large than 3000m3.

·     
Unable
to have cold cargo in the tanks because of the steel quality.

·     
Heavy
cargo construction because of toleration of the pressure.

 

3.6.2  Fully
pressurised chlorine Cl2 carrier

These tankers are built as fully pressurised
tankers LPG, but because of the toxicity of chlorine, special requirements are
set on this type of gas carrier. The requirements are stated in the IGC code
chapter 14, 17 and19. This type of ship must not have cargo tanks larger than
600 m3, and total capacity must not exceed 1200 m3.
Consequently, these gas carriers are smaller than the common fully pressurised
gas carriers LPG.

The cargo tanks must be built for an excess
pressure not lower than 13,5 bars, which is saturation pressure for Chlorine at
45oC. Tanks and lines must be built in steel quality that tolerates
a temperature down to
40oC. Cargo lines must at maximum have an
inner diameter of 100 mm. Tanks and lines must be insulated. Polyurethane or polystyrene is utilised as
insulation. This information is at all times specified in IMO Certificate of
Fitness. There is also a summary in the certificate of fitness as to what type
of cargoes the actual tanker is allowed to carry.

This type of gas carrier often has an
indirect cargo cooling plant with coils welded to the outside of the tank
shell. In general ethanol is used as cooling medium against Freon (R22) in a
small freon cooling plant. Other indirect cargo cooling plants utilise freon as
the cooling medium by directly pumping freon in and around the coils. It is
prohibited to use any kind of direct cargo cooling plant on chlorine.

To discharge these type of gas carriers the
cargo tanks excess pressure is used.
Either the pressure established by dry nitrogen or only the tank
pressure is used. Chlorine vapour
obtained from shore via the shipłs vapour lines can also be used for
discharging. Some chlorine carriers are also equipped with submerged pumps in
the cargo tanks.

This type of gas carrier mostly stays in the
chlorine trade, because of the toxicity of the cargo. There are few cargo
owners that accept to load other products after Chlorine. Chlorine carriers
can, if they are accepted, also carry LPG and some chemical gases depending on
the relief valvełs set point.

Because of the toxicity of chlorine it is
necessary that the chlorine carriers are equipped with a chlorine absorption
plant connected to cargo tanks and cargo lines. The absorption plant must
neutralise a minimum 2% of total cargo capacity. The gas detector onboard must
measure 1 ppm chlorine and alarm setting at 5 ppm. The gas detector must scan
the bottom of hold space, line from safety valve, the outlet from chlorine
absorption plant, into ventilation for accommodations and all of the gas area
on deck.

 

Advantages:

 


They are easy to operate.
Simple cargo handling equipment on deck.
Tanks and lines are insulated.
They have an indirect cooling plant, and
are thereby capable to cool cargo.


 

Disadvantages:

 


They are small tankers, and have thereby
low loading capacity.
Expensive to build in proportion to the
cargo amount they can transport.
The tankers are mainly designed for
Chlorine.


 










 

 

3.7         
Semi pressurised gas carriers

Semi-Pressurised gas carriers
are a development from fully pressurised carriers. Semi-pressurised carriers
are equipped with discharging pumps in the cargo tank, cargo cooling plant,
heat exchanger (cargo heater) and booster pumps. In addition, the tanks and
lines are insulated, normally with polyurethane or polystyrene. This renders
the ship type with more flexibility than other gas carrier types.
Semi-pressurised tankers are divided in two types - Semi-pressurised carrier
LPG/LEG and Semi-pressurised tanker combined gas and chemicals.

 

 

3.7.1  Semi-pressurised
LPG/ LEG carriers

Semi-pressurised carriers are more complex
than fully pressurised carriers due to their extended cargo handling equipment.
Semi pressurised tankers are equipped either with direct cargo cooling plant or
cascade cargo cooling plant. Which type of cargo cooling system the gas carrier
is equipped with depends on the type of cargo it is meant to carry. If the
tanker is carrying LPG or Ammonia with a boiling point at atmospheric pressure
warmer than
48oC, the choice is generally direct cargo-cooling
plant. If the vessel will transport cargo with a boiling point at atmospheric
pressure colder than
48oC, the vessel must be equipped with cascade
cooling plant.

Before loading cold cargo, the cargo tank
steel must be cooled down to approximate 10oC above cargo
temperature. It is common that the first 30oC can be cooled the
first hour. Thereby we can cool down the shell by 10oC an hour until
it is about 10oC above the cargo temperature. The cooling of the
tank steel must be done to prevent thermal expansion and crack in the tank
shell. A tank of 1000 m3 that is cooled from 20oC to
103oC
shrinks about 5 m3.

In addition, when the shell is cooled down,
the time for loading will be reduced and thereby reduces the time ashore. That
will save harbour expenses for the ship owners or the charterer. It is
specified in the operating manual for each vessel how to cool down the cargo
tank shell. We must be attentive to this, because uneven thermal shrinkage of
the cargo tank can lead to damage to the cargo tank.

Semi-pressurised gas carriers are normally
built in sizes from 2000 m3 to 15000 m3. They are designed to carry cargo with
temperatures down to
48oC for LPG and Ammonia, and
104oC
for LEG.



Semi-pressurised gas carriers are utilised
for transportation of petrochemical gases, such as, Propylene, Butadiene,
Ethylene and Ammonia, but also for gases, such as, Propane, Butane and Ethane.
There have been plans to build semi-pressurised tankers up to 36000 m3,
but they are still not built.

Semi-pressurised gas carriers have
independent tanks type C either as cylinder or spherical tank designed for tank
pressure between 0,5
11 bars. Either nickel steel or coal-manganese steel is
used in the cargo tanks. Semi-pressurised carriers with spherical tanks utilise
the same steel quality as in cylinder tanks. The cylinder tanks are often a
combination of twin tanks that are situated longitudinally of the ship, and a
single situated abeam. The tanks are placed below deck, but some vessels also
have cargo tanks on deck. This information is, at all times, specified in IMO
Certificate of Fitness. In the IMO Certificate of Fitness, there is also a
summary of cargo the vessel can carry.

The tanks are placed in “cradle-like"
constructions and are welded to one of the cradles; the other cradle then
functions as cargo tank support by expansion of the tank. The tanks are either
strapped down with steel bands or the brackets are welded on to prevent the
tanks from floating up. Between the cradle and the tank shell there is a layer
of hard wood that acts as a fender to prevent damage to the cargo tank against
the cradle, and acts as insulation against the steel in the cradle. On some
vessels, the cargo tanks are attached to one of the cradles, and free in the
other cradle for free expansion of the cargo tank. The spherical tanks are also
installed in a “cradle-like" construction, and brackets (anti float) are welded
on top of the cargo tank to prevent the cargo tanks from floating up. The
support goes towards a bracket in the hull of the tanker, either up under deck
or in the ship side.

Actual cargoes for Semi-pressurised gas
carriers are LPG, LEG, Ammonia, Ethylene and some chemical gases.

Semi-pressurised gas carriers are the type of
gas carriers that is most flexible for change of cargo and cargo handling.

 

 

Advantages:

 

·     
Very
flexible, can load and unload temperate cargo.

·     
Can
heat the cargo while at sea and while discharging.

·     
Can
transport fully cooled cargo, and thereby handle heavier cargo, lower
temperature, and larger density.
(Notice the safety valves set point).

·     
Easier
tank construction than fully pressurised tankers.

·     
Can
cool the cargo on route, no dependence at loading to remove excess pressure.

 

Disadvantages:

 

·     
Expensive
to build, costly cargo handling equipment.

·     
Complicated
to operate because of the cargo handling equipment.

·     
Uses
more energy than fully pressurised tankers.

·     
Limited
cargo amount (maximum approximate15000 m3).

 

Semi-pressurised tankers with deck cargo tank
or some transverse cargo tanks can have stability problems in
loading/discharging. This is specified in the operating manual and the
stability book for the tanker, and the operators onboard must consider this.

 

 

3.7.2  Semi
pressurised tankers (Combined gas/chemical)

These gas carriers are constructed like other
Semi pressurised tankers, but they are classified both according to IMO gas and
chemical codes. This involves separate liquid and vapour lines from each tank
to the manifold, in order to segregate all cargo tanks from each other. This
means that this type of gas carriers can load equally as much different cargo
as they have cargo tanks. The cargo tanks on this type of gas carrier are the
independent type C cylinder, generally single transverse or small alongside
twin tanks.

Cargo tanks, lines, and valves are
constructed in stainless steel, and these gas carriers are equipped with
indirect cargo cooling plant in addition to cascade cargo cooling plant. They
are constructed to transport cargo from
104oC to 60oC.
The indirect cargo cooling plant is often equipped with a coil welded outside
the tank shell, where Ethanol is used either to cool or heat the tank steel.
When cooling the tank steel, the Ethanol is cooled with the help of freon (R22)
cooling plant. The Ethanol is also utilised to heat the tank steel; it is then
heated with the tanker steam in a heat exchanger and pumped in and around the
coils.

These gas carriers are normally designed for
3 - 4 bars excess pressure and are built in sizes from 4000 m3 up to
15000 m3.

Actual cargo LPG / NH3 / LEG /
chemical gases and chemicals.

 

Advantages:

 


The tankers are very flexible, can
transport both chemicals and gas.
Tanks and lines are stainless steel.
Direct and indirect
cooling/heating.
Can load and discharge tempered cargo
and fully cooled cargo down to -104oC.
Access to many smaller ports/harbours
because of relatively little draught.


 

 

Disadvantages:

 


Expensive to build.
Demanding to operate because of
complicated cargo handling equipment.

Limited cargo volume because of the
tankerłs size.
The stability is a problem when
loading/unloading when there are many
transverse cargo tanks or deck cargo tanks. This is specified in the operational
manual and the stability book.


 



 

3.8         
Fully refrigerated carriers

Following semi-pressurised gas carriers, the
first atmospheric pressure gas carrier was delivered at the end of the 1950s.
These gas carriers are built in sizes from 15000 m3 to 120000 m3,
and are designed for excess tank pressure less than 0,7 bars. These gas
carriers are built either with independent tank type A or type B as prismatic
or spherical tanks, or with membrane tanks. With prismatic or membrane tanks the
volume of the hull is utilised, and tank construction is below deck. With
spherical tanks, about half of the cargo tank is above deck because the
vesselłs hull is lower than what you find with prismatic or membrane tanks.

 

3.8.1  Fully
refrigerated LPG carriers

The cargo tanks on fully refrigerated LPG carriers are
normally built of low temperature carbon-manganese steel. The cargo tanks are
designed for LPG, Ammonia and some chemical gases with minimum temperature of

48oC. The cargo tanks are normally insulated either with
Polyurethane or Polystyrene. Some of the older fully refrigerated gas carriers
have Perlite as tank insulation.

Fully refrigerated gas carriers are normally
equipped with independent type A or B prismatic cargo tank or membrane tanks.
Fully refrigerated carriers with independent tank type A must have a full
secondary barrier. This is achieved by using low temperature steel in the hull
structure around the cargo tank.

If independent tank type B is utilised either
prismatic or spherical tanks, only a partly secondary barrier is demanded. This
is achieved by utilising low temperature steel in the hull under the cargo
tank.

Independent prismatic cargo tanks are
normally divided into two in longitudinal direction with a centre bulkhead that
runs to the top of the tank dome. The centre bulkhead is built to improve the
stability on the carriers by reducing the effect of the free liquid surface
when the tanks are loaded.

There are normally one or more valves in the
centre bulkhead that is called intermediate valves. These intermediate valves
are installed down in the pump sump for the liquid to flow from one side to the
other. It is important that the intermediate valves are closed when there is no
loading or discharging of cargo. Normally there are two pumps in each cargo
tank.

With the intermediate valves open, one can
discharge the entire cargo tank with one pump.



 

 

Fully refrigerated carriers with membrane
tanks are without a centre bulkhead. Such gas carriers are built with a trunk
on deck that the membrane tank is formed out of, and thereby reduces the effect
of the free liquid surface.

Fully refrigerated carriers are generally
equipped with the same cargo handling equipment as Semi-pressurised carriers.
Some carriers also have coils in the pump sump that is used for liquid free the
tank, hot gas is blown through the coils. Some carriers are also equipped with
strip lines in the tank that either are connected to ejectors or transportable
membrane pumps, this is utilised when loading naphtha etc. Some atmospheric
pressure tankers do not have booster pumps or heat exchangers (cargo heaters).

Actual cargo for this type of gas carrier is
LPG, Ammonia, Naphtha, and some chemical gases, such as, Propylene, Butadiene
and VCM. Information of the type of cargo the tanker transports is located in
IMO Certificate of Fitness.

When atmospheric pressure gas carrier are
carrying flammable products, the hold space or the inter-barrier space must
have a content of neutral atmosphere with either dry inert gas or dry nitrogen.
When carrying non-flammable products, one utilises dry air or dry nitrogen on
the hold space.

This gas carrier type carries a lot of LPG
from the Persian Gulf to the Far East and USA.
Ammonia is transported from The Black Sea to USA and the Far East.

 

Advantages:

 

·     
Transports
large weight in proportion to volume because the cargo is at all times loaded
and transported at atmospheric pressure.

·     
Easier
cargo tank construction than Semi pressurised tanker

·     
Tanks
and lines are insulated.

·     
Have
large cargo cooling plant.

·     
Large
tankers are more efficient (cargo weight).

 

Disadvantages:

 

·     
Not so
flexible for cargo change as Semi pressurised tankers.

·     
Pressure
limitation, not possible to heat up cargo on route.

·     
Carrier
without heat exchanger (cargo heater) can only unload at atmospheric pressure
(fully cooled).

·     
Limited
access on terminals and ports with limitations to draught.

 



 

3.8.2  Fully
refrigerated LNG carriers

These gas carriers are special as they are
designed for loading gas at atmospheric pressure with a temperature down to

163oC. Fully refrigerated LNG carriers are either built
with independent tanks type B Moss-Rosenberg patent with spherical tanks or
French patents that utilises membrane tanks.

Spherical tanks of Moss Rosenberg patent are
built in aluminium. French patents with membrane tanks are built either in
stainless steel, 9% nickel steel or ferro nickel steel that have a 36% nickel
content. Common for all these steel types is that they have a thermal expansion
coefficient close to 0.These gas carriers are built from 20000 m3 to
125000 m3. The largest LNG carriers are, at all times, contracted on
basis of long cargo contracts over about 25 years. This is because these
tankers are very expensive to build, and are designed for LNG trade. The LNG
tankers compete with gas transportation in pipelines on shore, and the sea
transport amount to about 5% of the total LNG transport.

These tankers are special in that the vapour
boil off from the cargo is utilised as fuel to the vessels propulsion. For the
large LNG tanker, the vapour boil off is between 0,18% to 0,25% of the cargo
capacity per 24 hours. It is possible to produce cargo-cooling plants for the
large LNG tankers, but to cool 125000 m3 LNG about 6000 kW/h is
required. This indicates that this is too expensive, and it is more appropriate
to utilise the vapour boil off for propulsion. The smaller LNG tankers on the
other hand have a cargo cooling plant, and they transport some in LPG/LNG/LEG
trade.



 

LNG carriers have a special procedure for
cooling the cargo tanks before loading, which is specified in the tankerłs
operation manuals and certificates. The
tankers are equipped with a spray plant where Methane is pumped into the tankłs
spray line (perforated lines), which is installed inside the cargo tank.
Understandably, one must cool the cargo tanks a considerable amount of degrees
to be ready to load. One must never begin to load a cargo tank before there is

136oC in the middle of the tank, or by the tankłs equator.





 








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