1st Edition

Design Principles of Ships and Marine Structures

By Suresh Chandra Misra Copyright 2016
    500 Pages
    by CRC Press

    500 Pages 290 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

     

    The Definitive Reference for Designers and Design Students





    A solid grasp of the fundamentals of materials, along with a thorough understanding of load and design techniques, provides the components needed to complete a marine platform design. Design Principles of Ships and Marine Structures details every facet of ship design and design integration, and highlights the design aspects that must be put together to create an integrated whole product. This book discusses naval architecture and marine engineering applications and principles relevant to the design of various systems, examines advanced numerical techniques that can be applied to maritime design procedure at the concept design stage, and offers a comprehensive approach to the subject of ship design.





    Covers the Entire Sphere of Marine Design





    The book begins with an introduction to marine design and the marine environment, describing many of the marine products that are used for transportation, defense and the exploitation of marine resources. It also discusses stability issues relevant to ship design, as well as hydrodynamic aspects of resistance, propulsion, sea keeping and maneuvering, and their effects on design. In addition to covering the various systems and sub-systems that go into making a complex product to be used in maritime environment, the author explains engineering economics and its application in ship design, and provides examples wherever necessary.





    Written by an author with more than 35 years of teaching experience, this book:









    • Describes various design methodologies such as sequential design process with the application of concurrent engineering and set based design factors in the use of computer-aided design techniques


    • Highlights the shape design methodology of ship forms and layout design principles


    • Considers design aspects relative to safety and risk assessment


    • Introduces the design for production aspects in marine product development


    • Discusses design principles for sustainability


    • Explains the principles of numerical optimization for decision-making






    Design Principles of Ships and Marine Structures focuses on ship design efficiency, safety, sustainability, production, and management, and appeals to students and design professionals in the field of shipping, shipbuilding and offshore engineering.

    Introduction. Marine Environment. Design Process. Engineering Economics.Vehicle Parameter Estimation. Stability of Floating Bodies. Hydrodynamic Design. Hull Form Design. Machinery System. Structural Design. Layout Design. Design for Safety. Design for Sustainability. Design for Production. Decision-Making Process. Design Management. References.

    Biography

    Suresh Chandra Misra earned a degree in naval architecture from IIT Kharagpur, India, in 1970, and his PhD from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, in 1976. After serving for a few years as a design engineer in Hindustan Shipyard Ltd., Visakhapatnam, he joined the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, as an assistant professor in naval architecture. He became a professor and later head of the Department of Ocean Engineering and Naval Architecture before retiring from active service in 2013. He was also the director of the Indian maritime University, Visakhapatnem campus for the last five years of his active service period. Subsequent to his retirement, he has been involved in a number of research and consultancy activities in related areas.

    "The modern state-of-the-art of ships and offshore structures design is well presented. Brief but dense information is given for the history of the shipbuilding and offshore structures and the major characteristics of different ship’s and offshore structures types. … In my opinion, all major topics in shipbuilding and offshore structures are included."
    —Lyuben D Ivanov, Retired, formerly with American Bureau of Shipping