Effects of 'in-service' conditions - mimicked hull roughness ranges and biofilms - on the surface and the hydrodynamic characteristics of foul-release type coatings

Biofouling. 2020 Oct;36(9):1074-1089. doi: 10.1080/08927014.2020.1855330. Epub 2020 Dec 8.

Abstract

To develop a better understanding of 'in-service' performance of modern marine coatings, this study explored the combined effects of different roughness ranges of foul-release coating (FRC) and light biofouling (slime) on the surface, boundary layer and drag characteristics under a range of 'in-service' conditions. Natural and laboratory biofilms were grown dynamically on FRC panels by exposing panels in facilities dedicated to realistic fouling culture. The boundary layer experiments were conducted in a circulating water tunnel. Boundary layer similarity-law scaling was used to predict the combined effects of coating roughness and biofilms on the added frictional resistance (% ΔCF) and added required effective power (%ΔPE ) for a benchmark KRISO container ship (KCS) and a bulk carrier. The increase in %ΔPE due to the presence of biofilms on commercial FRC is estimated to be between 7% and 16% depending on the biofilm type, biofilm thickness and percentage coverage. Significant increases in effective power are estimated for non-fouling control primers with heavy fouling. Moreover, the paper suggests updated roughness allowances ( ΔCF ) for two vessel types assuming FRCs on their hulls with more representative hull roughness ranges and fluffy biofilms.

Keywords: Coatings ‘in-service’ condition; biofilms; fouling; ship power penalties; skin friction drag.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biofilms*
  • Biofouling / prevention & control
  • Friction
  • Hydrodynamics*
  • Ships
  • Surface Properties