Innovative Sea Chest Water Management System
Navy STTR 2020.A - Topic N20A-T008 NAVSEA - Mr. Dean Putnam [email protected] Opens: January 14, 2020 - Closes: February 26, 2020 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY AREA(S):
Ground/Sea Vehicles ACQUISITION PROGRAM: PMS
500, DDG 1000 Class Destroyer Program OBJECTIVE: Develop
technology required to reduce or remove ingested air and debris from sea chests
of new ship designs. DESCRIPTION: Design
requirements of current and future Navy surface ships limit the implementation
of common intake sea chest and seawater system design practices. The current
seawater intake system is prone to air, ice, and debris ingestion due to a
non-conventional intake design driven by signature requirements. The ingestion
leads to damaged downstream pumps and equipment, resulting in increased
maintenance costs and degraded overall cooling performance. The implementation
of sea chest intake improvements will rectify these issues by allowing for
clean flow through the pumps. New technologies internal to the sea chest will
be required to either reduce air and debris ingestion through the sea chest
inlet or remove it from within the sea chest. Reduced air and debris
entrainment will reduce noise and increase the service life of pumps and
downstream equipment. PHASE I: Define and
develop a concept for an innovative sea chest water treatment system that will
meet the objectives provided in the Description. Demonstrate the feasibility of
the concept through calculations and 3D physics-based computer modeling.
Include initial design specifications and a capabilities description to build a
prototype solution in Phase II. Develop an Initial Phase II Proposal. PHASE II: Develop and
deliver a prototype that demonstrates the capability with equipment
specifications defined during Phase I. Evaluate the demonstration on data
collected and the prototype�s ability to prevent intake of or remove debris and
air. Based on this analysis, recommend test fixtures and methodologies to
support environmental, shock, and vibration testing and qualification.
Determine, jointly with the Navy, the final system design for operational
evaluation, including required safety testing and certification. Provide a
technical work package to enable the system installation on board DDG 1000
destroyers, utilizing the test results and any lessons learned from the
prototype testing. PHASE III DUAL USE
APPLICATIONS: Transition the technology to the Navy for shipboard use. New sea
chest design could be applicable to any class ship in which signature or smooth
hull considerations are a priority; and can be accomplished either through
technical data package for Navy to procure or through the performer supplying
the material. REFERENCES: 1. Harrington, Roy.
�Marine Engineering.� Society for Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1992. https://www.sname.org/pubs/books 2. Surtherland, T.F. et
al. �Effect of a Ballast Water Treatment System On Survivorship of Natural
Populations of Marine Plankton.� Marine Ecology Progress Series, Vol 210, 26 January
2001, pp. 139-148.� https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v210/p139-148/ KEYWORDS: Sea Chest; Air
Ingestion; Pump Air Binding; Sea Water Systems; Cooling Water Fouling; Sea
Water Strainer; Cooling Water Treatment
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