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Ballast tank

A ballast tank is a compartment within a boat, ship or other floating structure that holds water, which is used as ballast to provide hydrostatic stability for a vessel, to reduce or control buoyancy, as in a submarine, to correct trim or list, to provide a more even load distribution along the hull to reduce structural hogging or sagging stresses, or to increase draft, as in a semi-submersible vessel or platform, or a SWATH, to improve seakeeping. Using water in a tank provides easier weight adjustment than the stone or iron ballast used in older vessels, and makes it easy for the crew to reduce a vessel's draft when it enters shallower water, by temporarily pumping out ballast. Airships use ballast tanks mainly to control buoyancy and correct trim.

Cross section of a vessel with a single ballast tank at the bottom.

History edit

The basic concept behind the ballast tank can be seen in many forms of aquatic life, such as the blowfish or argonaut octopus.[clarification needed][1] The concept has been invented and reinvented many times by humans to serve a variety of purposes.

The first documented example of a submarine using a ballast tank was in David Bushnell's Turtle, which was the first submarine to ever be used in combat in 1776.[2] In 1849 Abraham Lincoln, then an Illinois attorney, patented a ballast-tank system to enable cargo vessels to pass over shoals in North American rivers.[citation needed][clarification needed]

Ships edit

Ballast is used in surface vessels to alter the draft, trim, list and stability. It may also be used to modify structural load distribution, usually the longitudinal load distribution which affects hogging and sagging stresses. It may also be used to change the moments of inertia which affect motion in a seaway. International agreements under the Safety Of Life At Sea (SOLAS) Convention require that cargo vessels and passenger ships be constructed to withstand certain kinds of damage. The criteria specify the separation of compartments within the vessel, and the subdivision of those compartments. These International agreements rely on the states that signed the agreement to implement the regulations within their waters and on vessels entitled to fly their flag. Ballast may be used to compensate for stability losses due to flooding of some compartments.

The ballast is generally the water in which the vessel is floating at the time of ballasting, such as seawater, pumped into ballast tanks. Depending on the type of vessel, the tanks can be double bottom (extending across the breadth of the vessel), wing tanks (located on the outboard area from keel to deck) or hopper tanks (occupying the upper corner section between hull and main deck). These ballast tanks are connected to pumps that pump water in or out. Crews fill these tanks to add weight to the ship and improve its stability when it isn't carrying cargo. In extreme conditions, a crew may pump ballast water into dedicated cargo spaces to add extra weight during heavy weather or to pass under low bridges.

Submarines edit

 
Ballast tank locations on a submarine.

In submersibles and submarines, ballast tanks are used to control the buoyancy of the vessel.

Some submersibles, such as bathyscaphes, dive and re-surface solely by controlling their buoyancy. They flood ballast tanks to submerge, then to re-surface either drop discardable ballast weights, or use stored compressed air to blow their ballast tanks clear of water, becoming buoyant again.

Submarines are larger, more sophisticated and have powerful underwater propulsion. They must travel horizontal distances submerged, require precise control of depth, yet do not descend so deeply, nor need to dive vertically on station. Their primary means of controlling depth are their diving planes (hydroplanes in UK), in combination with forward motion. At the surface the ballast tanks are emptied to give positive buoyancy. When diving, the main ballast tanks are flooded to achieve approximately neutral buoyancy. Depth control tanks are used for fine control of buoyancy by pumping water in or out to compensate for variations in weight. Ballast water can be transferred between trim tanks to balance the vessel in horizontal trim. The planes are then adjusted together to drive the hull downwards, while still level. For a steeper dive, the stern planes may be reversed and used to pitch the hull downwards.

The crew submerges the vessel by opening vents in the top of the main ballast tanks and opening valves in the bottom. This lets water flood into the tank as air escapes through the top vents. As air escapes from the tank, the vessel's buoyancy decreases, causing it to sink. For the submarine to surface, the crew shuts the vents in the top of the ballast tanks and releases compressed air into the tanks. The high-pressure air accumulates at the top of the tanks and the air pocket pushes the water out through the bottom valves and increases the vessel's buoyancy, causing it to rise. As it rises, hydrostatic pressure decreases, causing the air to expand in the tanks and accelerate ascent rate until excess escapes through the bottom valves and maximum buoyancy occurs. A submarine may have several types of ballast tank: main ballast tanks for diving and surfacing, and trimming tanks for adjusting the submarine's attitude (its 'trim') both on the surface and when underwater, and depth control tanks for fine adjustments of buoyancy.[citation needed]

Floating structures edit

Ballast tanks are also integral to the stability and operation of deepwater offshore oil platforms and floating wind turbines.[3] The ballast increases "hydrostatic stability by moving the center of mass as low as possible, placing it beneath the centre of buoyancy."[3] Ballast may also be adjusted to convert a platform from a deep draught reduced waterplane area mode optimised for minimum motion in a seaway to a lower drag towing mode.

A floating dry dock is ballasted to sink the supporting deck below the depth of the vessel to be docked, and after the vessel has been moved over this surface and secured in place, the ballast is discharged to lift the docking platform and the docked vessel above the water. To make this possible, most of the structure under the supporting deck is divided into ballast tanks. A floating boat lift is a smaller version working on the same principle, which may be dedicated as the storage facility for a specific vessel.

Dry dock and lock caisson gates are floated into position over the sill, then the ballast tanks are flooded to hold the gate in place and make a seal while the dock or lock is drained.

Wakeboard boats edit

Most wakeboard-specific inboard-engine boats have multiple integrated ballast tanks that are filled with water by ballast pumps controlled from the helm with rocker switches. Typically the configuration is based on a three tank system with a tank in the center of the boat and two more in the rear of the boat on either side of the engine compartment. Just like larger ships when adding water ballast to smaller wakeboard boats the hull has a lower center of gravity, and increases the draft of the boat. Most wakeboard boat factory ballast systems can be upgraded with larger capacities by adding soft structured ballast bags. Increasing the displacement by ballasting causes the boat to make larger waves at any given speed, at the cost of greater power requirements and propeller loading to reach that speed.

Aircraft edit

Ballast tanks are also used in some types of aircraft, such as Aerostats (balloons and airships).

Environmental concerns edit

 
Diagram showing the water pollution of the seas from untreated ballast water discharges

Ballast water taken into a tank from one body of water and discharged in another body of water can introduce invasive species of aquatic life. The taking in of water from ballast tanks has been responsible for the introduction of species that cause environmental and economic damage like zebra mussels in the Great Lakes of Canada and the United States, for example.

Non-native macroinvertebrates can find their way into a ballast tank. This can cause problems ecologically and economically. Macro-invertebrates are transported by transoceanic and coastal vessels arriving in ports all over the world. Researchers from Switzerland sampled 67 ballast tanks from 62 different vessels operating along geographic pathways, and tested for mid ocean exchange or voyage length that had a high chance of macro-invertebrate relocating to a different part of the world. An assessment was done between the relationship of macro-invertebrate presence, and the amount of sediment in ballast tanks. They discovered a presence of a highly invasive European green crab, mud crab, common periwinkle, soft-shell clam, and blue mussel in the ballast tanks of the sampled ships. Although the densities of macro-invertebrate were low, invasion of non-native macro-invertebrates can be worrisome during their mating season. The most serious effect is observed when a female macro-invertebrate is carrying millions of eggs per animal.[4]

Migration of living animals and settling particle-attached organisms can lead to changed distributions of biota at different locations of the world. When small organisms escape from a ballast tank, the foreign organism can upset the ecological balance of the local habitat and potentially damage the existing life. Vessel workers check the ballast tank for living organisms ≥50 μm in discrete segments of the drain, it also represents the level of sedimentary of different rock or soil in the tank.[clarification needed] Throughout the sample collection, concentrations of organisms varied in result in the drain segments, patterns also varied in level of stratification in other trials.[clarification needed] The best sampling strategy for stratified tanks is to collect various time-integrated samples spaced evenly throughout each discharge.[5]

All transoceanic vessels that enter the Great Lakes are required to manage ballast water and ballast tank residuals with ballast water to clear out and exchange for tank flushing. Management and procedures reduce the density and richness of biota effectively in ballast waters and thus reduce the risk of transporting organisms from other parts of the world to non-native areas. Although most ships do ballast water management not all are able to clear the tanks. In an emergency, when the crew can clean out residual organisms, they use sodium chloride (salt) brine to treat the ballast tanks. Vessels arriving in the Great Lakes, and North Sea ports, were exposed to high concentrations of sodium chloride until the mortality rate of 100% is reached. Results show that an exposure of 115% of brine is extremely effective treatment resulting in a 99.9 mortality rate of living organisms in ballast tanks regardless of the type of organism. There was a median of 0%. About 0.00–5.33 of organisms are expect to survive treatment of the sodium chloride.[6]

The Ballast Water Management Convention, adopted by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) on 13 February 2004, aims to prevent the spread of harmful aquatic organisms from one region to another, by establishing standards and procedures for the management and control of ships' ballast water and sediments. This entered into force worldwide on 8 September 2017.[7] Under the convention, all ships in international traffic are required to manage their ballast water and sediments to a certain standard, according to a ship-specific ballast water management plan. All ships will also have to carry a ballast water record book and an international ballast water management certificate. The ballast water management standards will be phased in over a period of time. As an intermediate solution, ships should exchange ballast water mid-ocean. However, eventually most ships will need to install an on-board ballast water treatment system.[7]

A number of guidelines have been developed to help implement the convention. The convention will require all ships to implement a Ballast Water and Sediments Management Plan. All ships will have to carry a Ballast Water Record Book and will be required to carry out ballast water management procedures to a given standard. Existing ships will be required to do the same, but after a phase-in period.[7]

One of the most common problems in vessel maintenance is the corrosion that takes place in the double hull space ballast tanks occupy in merchant vessels.[8] Bio-degradation of ballast tank coatings takes place in marine environments. Ballast tanks usually carry bacteria and other organisms, some of which can damage the ballast tank coating and structure.[9]

Micro-cracks and small holes have been found in ballast tanks. Acidic bacteria created holes with 0.2–0.9 μm in length and 4–9 μm in width. The natural community caused cracks of 2–8 μm in depth and 1 μm in length. The bacterial affected coatings decreased in corrosion resistance, as assessed by Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS).[9]

The natural bacterial community causes a loss in coating corrosion resistance over time, declining after 40 days of exposure, resulting in blisters in the ballast tank surface. Bacteria might be linked to certain bio-film patterns affecting various types of coating attacks.[vague][9][10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Yong, Ed (2010-05-18). "Scientists solve millennia-old mystery about the argonaut octopus". Planet Earth. Discover. Kalmbach Media.
  2. ^ Roland, Alex (1977). "Bushnell's Submarine: American Original or European Import?". Technology and Culture. 18 (2): 159. doi:10.2307/3103954. JSTOR 3103954. S2CID 112333776.
  3. ^ a b Musial, W.; S. Butterfield; A. Boone (November 2003). Feasibility of Floating Platform Systems for Wind Turbines (PDF) (Preprint). pp. 2–3. doi:10.2514/6.2004-1007. ISBN 978-1-62410-078-9. OSTI 15005820. NREL/CP–500–34874. Retrieved 2010-05-04. Spar buoys ... have been used in the offshore oil industry for many years. They consist of a single long cylindrical tank and achieve hydrodynamic stability by moving the center-of-mass as low as possible, placing ballast beneath the buoyancy tank."; "to maintain platform stability against overturning, especially for a wind turbine where the weight and horizontal forces act so far above the center of buoyancy. ... significant ballast must be added below the center of buoyancy, or the buoyancy must be widely distributed to provide stability. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Briski, E.; Ghabooli, S.; Bailey, S.; MacIsaac, H. (2012). "Invasion risk posed by macroinvertebrates transported in ships' ballast tanks". Biological Invasions. 14 (9). Springer: 1843–1850. doi:10.1007/s10530-012-0194-0. ISSN 1573-1464. S2CID 14502375.
  5. ^ First, Matthew R.; Robbins-Wamsley, Stephanie H.; Riley, Scott C.; Moser, Camerson S.; et al. (2013). "Stratification of living organisms in ballast tanks: How do organism concentrations vary as ballast water is discharged?". Environmental Science & Technology. 47 (9): 4442–4448. Bibcode:2013EnST...47.4442F. doi:10.1021/es400033z. PMID 23614690.
  6. ^ Bradie, J.; Velde, G.; MacIsaac, H.; Bailey, S. (2010). "Brine-induced mortality of non-indigenous invertebrates in residual ballast water" (PDF). Marine Environmental Research. 70 (5). Elsevier: 395–401. Bibcode:2010MarER..70..395B. doi:10.1016/j.marenvres.2010.08.003. ISSN 0141-1136. PMID 20843548.
  7. ^ a b c "Implementing the Ballast Water Management Convention". London: International Maritime Organization. 2019.
  8. ^ De Baere, Kris; Verstraelen, Helen; Rigo, Philippe; Van Passel, Steven; et al. (July 2013). "Reducing the cost of ballast tank corrosion: An economic modeling approach". Marine Structures. 32. Elsevier: 136–152. doi:10.1016/j.marstruc.2012.10.009. ISSN 0951-8339.
  9. ^ a b c Heyer, A.; D'Souza, F.; Zhang, X.; Ferrari, G.; et al. (2014). "Biodegradation of ballast tank coating investigated by impedance spectroscopy and microscopy". Biodegradation. 25 (1). Springer: 67–83. doi:10.1007/s10532-013-9641-6. ISSN 1572-9729. PMID 23660751. S2CID 15023985.
  10. ^ Kinver, Mark (2008-05-12). "Microwaves 'cook ballast aliens'". BBC News.

ballast, tank, other, uses, ballast, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspaper. For other uses see Ballast disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ballast tank news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A ballast tank is a compartment within a boat ship or other floating structure that holds water which is used as ballast to provide hydrostatic stability for a vessel to reduce or control buoyancy as in a submarine to correct trim or list to provide a more even load distribution along the hull to reduce structural hogging or sagging stresses or to increase draft as in a semi submersible vessel or platform or a SWATH to improve seakeeping Using water in a tank provides easier weight adjustment than the stone or iron ballast used in older vessels and makes it easy for the crew to reduce a vessel s draft when it enters shallower water by temporarily pumping out ballast Airships use ballast tanks mainly to control buoyancy and correct trim Cross section of a vessel with a single ballast tank at the bottom Contents 1 History 2 Ships 3 Submarines 4 Floating structures 5 Wakeboard boats 6 Aircraft 7 Environmental concerns 8 See also 9 ReferencesHistory editThe basic concept behind the ballast tank can be seen in many forms of aquatic life such as the blowfish or argonaut octopus clarification needed 1 The concept has been invented and reinvented many times by humans to serve a variety of purposes The first documented example of a submarine using a ballast tank was in David Bushnell s Turtle which was the first submarine to ever be used in combat in 1776 2 In 1849 Abraham Lincoln then an Illinois attorney patented a ballast tank system to enable cargo vessels to pass over shoals in North American rivers citation needed clarification needed Ships editBallast is used in surface vessels to alter the draft trim list and stability It may also be used to modify structural load distribution usually the longitudinal load distribution which affects hogging and sagging stresses It may also be used to change the moments of inertia which affect motion in a seaway International agreements under the Safety Of Life At Sea SOLAS Convention require that cargo vessels and passenger ships be constructed to withstand certain kinds of damage The criteria specify the separation of compartments within the vessel and the subdivision of those compartments These International agreements rely on the states that signed the agreement to implement the regulations within their waters and on vessels entitled to fly their flag Ballast may be used to compensate for stability losses due to flooding of some compartments The ballast is generally the water in which the vessel is floating at the time of ballasting such as seawater pumped into ballast tanks Depending on the type of vessel the tanks can be double bottom extending across the breadth of the vessel wing tanks located on the outboard area from keel to deck or hopper tanks occupying the upper corner section between hull and main deck These ballast tanks are connected to pumps that pump water in or out Crews fill these tanks to add weight to the ship and improve its stability when it isn t carrying cargo In extreme conditions a crew may pump ballast water into dedicated cargo spaces to add extra weight during heavy weather or to pass under low bridges Submarines edit nbsp Ballast tank locations on a submarine In submersibles and submarines ballast tanks are used to control the buoyancy of the vessel Some submersibles such as bathyscaphes dive and re surface solely by controlling their buoyancy They flood ballast tanks to submerge then to re surface either drop discardable ballast weights or use stored compressed air to blow their ballast tanks clear of water becoming buoyant again Submarines are larger more sophisticated and have powerful underwater propulsion They must travel horizontal distances submerged require precise control of depth yet do not descend so deeply nor need to dive vertically on station Their primary means of controlling depth are their diving planes hydroplanes in UK in combination with forward motion At the surface the ballast tanks are emptied to give positive buoyancy When diving the main ballast tanks are flooded to achieve approximately neutral buoyancy Depth control tanks are used for fine control of buoyancy by pumping water in or out to compensate for variations in weight Ballast water can be transferred between trim tanks to balance the vessel in horizontal trim The planes are then adjusted together to drive the hull downwards while still level For a steeper dive the stern planes may be reversed and used to pitch the hull downwards The crew submerges the vessel by opening vents in the top of the main ballast tanks and opening valves in the bottom This lets water flood into the tank as air escapes through the top vents As air escapes from the tank the vessel s buoyancy decreases causing it to sink For the submarine to surface the crew shuts the vents in the top of the ballast tanks and releases compressed air into the tanks The high pressure air accumulates at the top of the tanks and the air pocket pushes the water out through the bottom valves and increases the vessel s buoyancy causing it to rise As it rises hydrostatic pressure decreases causing the air to expand in the tanks and accelerate ascent rate until excess escapes through the bottom valves and maximum buoyancy occurs A submarine may have several types of ballast tank main ballast tanks for diving and surfacing and trimming tanks for adjusting the submarine s attitude its trim both on the surface and when underwater and depth control tanks for fine adjustments of buoyancy citation needed Floating structures editBallast tanks are also integral to the stability and operation of deepwater offshore oil platforms and floating wind turbines 3 The ballast increases hydrostatic stability by moving the center of mass as low as possible placing it beneath the centre of buoyancy 3 Ballast may also be adjusted to convert a platform from a deep draught reduced waterplane area mode optimised for minimum motion in a seaway to a lower drag towing mode A floating dry dock is ballasted to sink the supporting deck below the depth of the vessel to be docked and after the vessel has been moved over this surface and secured in place the ballast is discharged to lift the docking platform and the docked vessel above the water To make this possible most of the structure under the supporting deck is divided into ballast tanks A floating boat lift is a smaller version working on the same principle which may be dedicated as the storage facility for a specific vessel Dry dock and lock caisson gates are floated into position over the sill then the ballast tanks are flooded to hold the gate in place and make a seal while the dock or lock is drained This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2010 Wakeboard boats editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Most wakeboard specific inboard engine boats have multiple integrated ballast tanks that are filled with water by ballast pumps controlled from the helm with rocker switches Typically the configuration is based on a three tank system with a tank in the center of the boat and two more in the rear of the boat on either side of the engine compartment Just like larger ships when adding water ballast to smaller wakeboard boats the hull has a lower center of gravity and increases the draft of the boat Most wakeboard boat factory ballast systems can be upgraded with larger capacities by adding soft structured ballast bags Increasing the displacement by ballasting causes the boat to make larger waves at any given speed at the cost of greater power requirements and propeller loading to reach that speed Aircraft editBallast tanks are also used in some types of aircraft such as Aerostats balloons and airships This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2022 Environmental concerns edit nbsp Diagram showing the water pollution of the seas from untreated ballast water discharges This section duplicates the scope of other articles specifically Ballast water discharge and the environment Please discuss this issue and help introduce a summary style to the section by replacing the section with a link and a summary or by splitting the content into a new article Main article Ballast water discharge and the environment Ballast water taken into a tank from one body of water and discharged in another body of water can introduce invasive species of aquatic life The taking in of water from ballast tanks has been responsible for the introduction of species that cause environmental and economic damage like zebra mussels in the Great Lakes of Canada and the United States for example Non native macroinvertebrates can find their way into a ballast tank This can cause problems ecologically and economically Macro invertebrates are transported by transoceanic and coastal vessels arriving in ports all over the world Researchers from Switzerland sampled 67 ballast tanks from 62 different vessels operating along geographic pathways and tested for mid ocean exchange or voyage length that had a high chance of macro invertebrate relocating to a different part of the world An assessment was done between the relationship of macro invertebrate presence and the amount of sediment in ballast tanks They discovered a presence of a highly invasive European green crab mud crab common periwinkle soft shell clam and blue mussel in the ballast tanks of the sampled ships Although the densities of macro invertebrate were low invasion of non native macro invertebrates can be worrisome during their mating season The most serious effect is observed when a female macro invertebrate is carrying millions of eggs per animal 4 Migration of living animals and settling particle attached organisms can lead to changed distributions of biota at different locations of the world When small organisms escape from a ballast tank the foreign organism can upset the ecological balance of the local habitat and potentially damage the existing life Vessel workers check the ballast tank for living organisms 50 mm in discrete segments of the drain it also represents the level of sedimentary of different rock or soil in the tank clarification needed Throughout the sample collection concentrations of organisms varied in result in the drain segments patterns also varied in level of stratification in other trials clarification needed The best sampling strategy for stratified tanks is to collect various time integrated samples spaced evenly throughout each discharge 5 All transoceanic vessels that enter the Great Lakes are required to manage ballast water and ballast tank residuals with ballast water to clear out and exchange for tank flushing Management and procedures reduce the density and richness of biota effectively in ballast waters and thus reduce the risk of transporting organisms from other parts of the world to non native areas Although most ships do ballast water management not all are able to clear the tanks In an emergency when the crew can clean out residual organisms they use sodium chloride salt brine to treat the ballast tanks Vessels arriving in the Great Lakes and North Sea ports were exposed to high concentrations of sodium chloride until the mortality rate of 100 is reached Results show that an exposure of 115 of brine is extremely effective treatment resulting in a 99 9 mortality rate of living organisms in ballast tanks regardless of the type of organism There was a median of 0 About 0 00 5 33 of organisms are expect to survive treatment of the sodium chloride 6 The Ballast Water Management Convention adopted by the International Maritime Organization IMO on 13 February 2004 aims to prevent the spread of harmful aquatic organisms from one region to another by establishing standards and procedures for the management and control of ships ballast water and sediments This entered into force worldwide on 8 September 2017 7 Under the convention all ships in international traffic are required to manage their ballast water and sediments to a certain standard according to a ship specific ballast water management plan All ships will also have to carry a ballast water record book and an international ballast water management certificate The ballast water management standards will be phased in over a period of time As an intermediate solution ships should exchange ballast water mid ocean However eventually most ships will need to install an on board ballast water treatment system 7 A number of guidelines have been developed to help implement the convention The convention will require all ships to implement a Ballast Water and Sediments Management Plan All ships will have to carry a Ballast Water Record Book and will be required to carry out ballast water management procedures to a given standard Existing ships will be required to do the same but after a phase in period 7 One of the most common problems in vessel maintenance is the corrosion that takes place in the double hull space ballast tanks occupy in merchant vessels 8 Bio degradation of ballast tank coatings takes place in marine environments Ballast tanks usually carry bacteria and other organisms some of which can damage the ballast tank coating and structure 9 Micro cracks and small holes have been found in ballast tanks Acidic bacteria created holes with 0 2 0 9 mm in length and 4 9 mm in width The natural community caused cracks of 2 8 mm in depth and 1 mm in length The bacterial affected coatings decreased in corrosion resistance as assessed by Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy EIS 9 The natural bacterial community causes a loss in coating corrosion resistance over time declining after 40 days of exposure resulting in blisters in the ballast tank surface Bacteria might be linked to certain bio film patterns affecting various types of coating attacks vague 9 10 See also editCorrosion in ballast tanks Floating wind turbine Type of wind turbine Floating oil platform Offshore ocean structure with oil drilling and related facilities Kingston valve Valve on the exterior of a ship s hull Saddle tank submarine Submarine ballast tanks fitted in pairs along the sides of the hull Sailing ballast Weights used in sailboats to provide righting moment to resist the heeling forces on the sailPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Vent submarine Valve fitted to the top of a submarine s ballast tanksReferences edit Yong Ed 2010 05 18 Scientists solve millennia old mystery about the argonaut octopus Planet Earth Discover Kalmbach Media Roland Alex 1977 Bushnell s Submarine American Original or European Import Technology and Culture 18 2 159 doi 10 2307 3103954 JSTOR 3103954 S2CID 112333776 a b Musial W S Butterfield A Boone November 2003 Feasibility of Floating Platform Systems for Wind Turbines PDF Preprint pp 2 3 doi 10 2514 6 2004 1007 ISBN 978 1 62410 078 9 OSTI 15005820 NREL CP 500 34874 Retrieved 2010 05 04 Spar buoys have been used in the offshore oil industry for many years They consist of a single long cylindrical tank and achieve hydrodynamic stability by moving the center of mass as low as possible placing ballast beneath the buoyancy tank to maintain platform stability against overturning especially for a wind turbine where the weight and horizontal forces act so far above the center of buoyancy significant ballast must be added below the center of buoyancy or the buoyancy must be widely distributed to provide stability a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Briski E Ghabooli S Bailey S MacIsaac H 2012 Invasion risk posed by macroinvertebrates transported in ships ballast tanks Biological Invasions 14 9 Springer 1843 1850 doi 10 1007 s10530 012 0194 0 ISSN 1573 1464 S2CID 14502375 First Matthew R Robbins Wamsley Stephanie H Riley Scott C Moser Camerson S et al 2013 Stratification of living organisms in ballast tanks How do organism concentrations vary as ballast water is discharged Environmental Science amp Technology 47 9 4442 4448 Bibcode 2013EnST 47 4442F doi 10 1021 es400033z PMID 23614690 Bradie J Velde G MacIsaac H Bailey S 2010 Brine induced mortality of non indigenous invertebrates in residual ballast water PDF Marine Environmental Research 70 5 Elsevier 395 401 Bibcode 2010MarER 70 395B doi 10 1016 j marenvres 2010 08 003 ISSN 0141 1136 PMID 20843548 a b c Implementing the Ballast Water Management Convention London International Maritime Organization 2019 De Baere Kris Verstraelen Helen Rigo Philippe Van Passel Steven et al July 2013 Reducing the cost of ballast tank corrosion An economic modeling approach Marine Structures 32 Elsevier 136 152 doi 10 1016 j marstruc 2012 10 009 ISSN 0951 8339 a b c Heyer A D Souza F Zhang X Ferrari G et al 2014 Biodegradation of ballast tank coating investigated by impedance spectroscopy and microscopy Biodegradation 25 1 Springer 67 83 doi 10 1007 s10532 013 9641 6 ISSN 1572 9729 PMID 23660751 S2CID 15023985 Kinver Mark 2008 05 12 Microwaves cook ballast aliens BBC News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ballast tank amp oldid 1182551504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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