Economic impact of biofouling on a naval surface ship
United States Naval Academy · Naval Surface Warfare Center · +1 more institution
Abstract
In the present study, the overall economic impact of hull fouling on a mid-sized naval surface ship (Arleigh Burke-class destroyer DDG-51) has been analyzed. A range of costs associated with hull fouling was examined, including expenditures for fuel, hull coatings, hull coating application and removal, and hull cleaning. The results indicate that the primary cost associated with fouling is due to increased fuel consumption attributable to increased frictional drag. The costs related to hull cleaning and painting are much lower than the fuel costs. The overall cost associated with hull fouling for the Navy's present coating, cleaning, and fouling level is estimated to be $56M per year for the entire DDG-51…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 85.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Hull
- Fouling
- Biofouling
- Marine engineering
- Navy
- Fuel efficiency
- Environmental science
- Engineering
- Affordable and clean energy