J Coast Disaster Prev > Volume 6(4); 2019 > Article
Journal of Coastal Disaster Prevention 2019;6(4):139-145.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.20481/kscdp.2019.6.139    Published online October 30, 2019.
The Study on Trafficability Assessment of Tracked Vehicle on Soft Seabed
Osoon Kwon, Insung Jang, Myounghak Oh, Hyoun Kang
해저연약지반에서 궤도차량의 기동 성능평가 기법에 대한 고찰
권오순, 장인성, 오명학, 강현
 
Abstract
Recently, the underwater robots in the ocean have been used more frequently. Not only the tracked heavy duty underwater vehicles for underwater pipeline or cabling but also tracked vehicles for the shallow water level area(0~5m water depth) where on-land working vehicles and ships can not work. Tracked vehicles secure trafficability by pushing the ground in the track, and if the ground is weak, the soil thrust sufficient to move the equipment cannot be ensured, making the vehicle impossible to move. In the previous study to evaluate the trafficability of tracked vehicle on the soft ground, vehicle can move when the ground thrust is greater by calculating the soil thrust exerted by the ground and the resistance to the vehicle s movement. However, if the seabed soil strength is very small and the ground is not sufficiently supported, the method of assessment by settlement may overestimate the vehicle’s trafficability. In this paper, the depth of destruction beyond the supporting force of the ground due to the heavy tracked vehicle s self weight placed on the weak ground was assessed as the vehicle s sinking load, and the trafficability of the tracked vehicle was evaluated by comparing the resistance and thrust of the ground at this time. In addition, if soft ground exists thinly on hard soil or rocky condition of the seabed, the trafficability of the tracked vehicle was finally assessed, taking into account the increased resistance of the ground due to the settlement of the track vehicle on the soft ground.
Key Words: Tracked vehicle; Bearing capacity; Trafficability; Soil thrust; Resistance


ABOUT
BROWSE ARTICLES
EDITORIAL POLICY
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Editorial Office
A-114, College of Engineering, Konkuk University, 120 Neungdongro, Gwangjin-gu, Seoul 05029, Korea
Tel: +82-2-444-7494    Fax: +82-2-444-7264    E-mail: kscdp@kscdp.or.kr                

Copyright © 2024 by Korean Society of Coastal Disaster Prevention.

Developed in M2PI

Close layer
prev next