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Ship hull in-water cleaning and its effects on fouling-control coatings

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posted on 2020-05-13, 16:13 authored by Dinis Reis Oliveira, Lena Granhag

Today, ship hull fouling is managed through fouling-control coatings, complemented with in-water cleaning. During cleaning, coating damage and wear must be avoided, for maximum coating lifetime and reduced antifoulant release. When possible, cleaning should target early stages of fouling, using minimal forces. However, such forces, and their effects on coatings, have not yet been fully quantified. In this one-year study, minimal cleaning forces were determined using a newly-designed immersed waterjet. The results show that bi-monthly/monthly cleaning, with maximum wall shear stress up to ∼1.3kPa and jet stagnation pressure ∼0.17MPa, did not appear to cause damage or wear on either the biocidal antifouling (AF) or the biocide-free foul-release (FR) coatings. The AF coating required bi-monthly cleanings to keep fouling to incipient slime (time-averaged results), while the FR coating had a similar fouling level even without cleaning. The reported forces may be used in matching cleaning parameters to the adhesion strength of the early stages of fouling.

Funding

This study was prepared within the project COMPLETE - Completing management options in the Baltic Sea region to reduce risk of invasive species introduction by shipping [#R069]. The project is co-financed by the European Union’s funding Programme Interreg Baltic Sea Region (European Regional Development Fund).

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