Method and system for reducing vessel fuel consumption
US-2022194533-A1 · Jun 23, 2022 · US
US12345376B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12345376-B2 |
| Application number | US-202118038386-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 3, 2021 |
| Priority date | Dec 3, 2020 |
| Publication date | Jul 1, 2025 |
| Grant date | Jul 1, 2025 |
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A method for assisting the management of a vessel comprising at least one tank configured to contain liquefied gas and a vapor phase treatment system capable of sending boil-off gas exiting the tank to a propulsion engine of the vessel or to a gas combustion unit on board the vessel and capable of extracting a portion of the liquid phase contained in the tank and of evaporating this portion in order to send it to the propulsion engine. The method comprises: generating at least one tank management scenario defining an evolution of the pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank along a path of the vessel; computing a cost function that at least depends on a total amount of boil-off gas generated in the tank along the path; and displaying to a user the tank management scenario as a function of the computed cost function.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A computer-implemented method for assisting a management of a vessel for transporting liquefied gas, the vessel comprising a vapor phase treatment system and at least one tank configured to contain liquefied gas, the vapor phase treatment system being capable of sending boil-off gas exiting the tank to a propulsion engine of the vessel and to a gas combustion unit on board the vessel, the method comprising: providing an initial state of the tank, said initial state of the tank comprising an initial pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank and an initial temperature of the liquid phase contained in the tank; providing a forecast path of the vessel; acquiring weather forecasts; determining, on the basis of the acquired weather forecasts, at least one environmental parameter of the vessel along said forecast path; determining a speed curve of the vessel along said forecast path; generating a tank management scenario defining an evolution of the pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank during said forecast path, and, based on the generated tank management scenario: a) estimating a curve of an indicative quantity on the basis of the tank management scenario, the indicative quantity being indicative of an operation of the propulsion engine along said forecast path, as a function of said speed curve of the vessel and of said at least one environmental parameter; b) estimating a curve of an amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank along said forecast path on the basis of the tank management scenario by using a tank model capable of estimating an amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank; c) estimating, on the basis of said curve of the indicative quantity and of said curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated, a curve of an amount of the boil-off gas generated to be extracted from the tank and a curve of an amount of the boil-off gas generated to be burned in the gas combustion unit; and displaying to a user the tank management scenario. 2. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the vapor phase treatment system is further capable of extracting a portion of the liquid phase contained in the tank and of evaporating the portion in order to send the portion to the propulsion engine. 3. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the indicative quantity is a power required to be output from the propulsion engine along said forecast path. 4. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein multiple tank management scenarios are generated, with the steps a) to c) being carried out for each tank management scenario, the method further comprising: d) assessing each tank management scenario by computing a cost function that depends at least on a total amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank along said forecast path; and wherein the displaying of the tank management scenario to a user comprises displaying at least one of said tank management scenarios that best minimizes the cost function. 5. The method as claimed in claim 4 , wherein, before displaying the at least one of said tank management scenarios to the user, said tank management scenarios are iteratively regenerated a number of times by a first evolutionary algorithm using the cost function as a first objective function. 6. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein said forecast path comprises path steps each defined by two waypoints and a heading to be followed between said two waypoints, and wherein, in the step a), said curve of the indicative quantity is estimated as a function of said headings to be followed, of said speed curve of the vessel and of said at least one environmental parameter. 7. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein said speed curve of the vessel is determined from said forecast path and from said at least one environmental parameter by a second evolutionary algorithm using a second objective function that depends on a total amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank along said forecast path and on a difference between a required time of arrival at the destination and an estimated time of arrival at the destination. 8. The method as claimed in claim 4 , wherein the method further comprises providing an offloading pressure and/or an offloading temperature required by an offloading terminal at the destination of the vessel, and wherein, in the step d), the cost function further depends on a difference between the pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank at the end of said forecast path and said offloading pressure and/or a difference between the temperature of the liquid phase contained in the tank at the end of said forecast path and said offloading temperature. 9. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein, in the step a), said curve of the indicative quantity is estimated using a first statistical model, the first statistical model being capable of estimating said indicative quantity at least as a function of a vessel speed setpoint and of said at least one environmental parameter, and the first statistical model being trained by a supervised machine learning method. 10. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the step b) involving the estimating the curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank along said forecast path comprises estimating a first amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank as a function of a current pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank and of a current temperature of the liquid phase contained in the vessel and estimating a second amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank as a function of a current pressure of the gas phase contained in the tank and of said at least one environmental parameter. 11. The method as claimed in claim 10 , wherein the second amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank is estimated using a second statistical model, the second statistical model being trained by a supervised machine learning method. 12. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the initial state comprises an initial composition of the liquefied gas contained in the tank, and wherein the step b) involving the estimating the curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated in the tank along said forecast path further comprises estimating a composition of the boil-off gas generated in the tank. 13. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the environmental parameter comprises at least one from among a current direction, a current speed, a wind speed, a wind direction, an average wave height, a wave direction, and a wave period. 14. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the vapor phase treatment system further comprises a reliquefaction plant capable of reliquefying the boil-off gas exiting the tank and of returning the boil-off gas thus re-liquefied to the tank, and wherein the step c) comprises the estimating, on the basis of said curve of the indicative quantity and of said curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated, the curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated to be extracted from the tank, the curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated to be burned in the gas combustion unit, and the curve of the amount of the boil-off gas generated to be sent to the reliquefaction plant. 15. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the steps of the method as claimed in claim 1 are repeated at fixed intervals and/or upon receipt of new weather forecasts. 16. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the vapor phase treatment system further comprises a sub-cooler capable of sub-cooling a portion of the liquid phase contained in the tank and of returning the portion thus sub-co
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