Current Profiling & China’s Maritime Infrastructure Drive
China’s recent wave of infrastructure renewal has included a large portfolio of developments, such as ports and other developments, that have a subsea component. Accurate, efficient and cost-effective current profiling is vital in the successful implementation of major maritime projects.
Nortek has been able to play a role in this side of China’s economic revolution, through its collaboration with a subsidiary of China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), a Fortune 500 listed firm that has been at the forefront of the infrastructure drive.
CCCC & Nortek
CCCC’s hydrological surveyors have been using Nortek instruments on a number of projects over the last 12 years, using both Signature1000 and Signature500 acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) to provide hydrological data that informs construction of ports and offshore developments.
Deploying the instruments as part of Nortek’s Signature VM package enables the company to obtain measurements in a diverse range of scenarios. These scenarios include cross-section, multi-point, velocity profile measurements and fixed-point measurements for offshore platforms, ports, bridges and other structures in or near the sea, as well as establishing navigation parameters at specific locations at sea.
The integrated package is designed to ensure high data quality and that both errors and initial installation time are reduced. The ADCPs and the linked software provide accurate profiles in conjunction with an Advanced Navigation GNSS compass mounted on the vessel, which provides navigation and heading data based on GPS.
“Without this essential data, as well as the verification of the mathematical model, the design and construction of ports and offshore developments would have no basis,” said Wang Yan, Senior Manager of Hydrology of the Geotechnical Investigation Division at CCCC’s Zhongjiao No.1 Hangwu Engineering Reconnaissance Design Institute.
The company has become a leading force in the field of coastal engineering construction in China. Since its establishment in 1958, it has been responsible for the survey and design work behind more than 4,000 projects.
A Diversity of Sites
Wang said the Signature ADCP’s versatility makes it a good fit for the company, since the hydrological conditions and operating requirements at its sites are complex and diverse. He said the Signature’s ability to work both at fixed points and while navigating, and to record measurements both online or as a self-contained unit, have proved invaluable.
The main task of Wang’s hydrology survey team is to observe and analyze waves, tides and flows in different sea areas, to issue related reports and to provide basic data for the design and model checking of major offshore projects. Its work focuses include long-term and short-term observations of waves, fixed-point currents, nautical flows, sediment concentrations and tides.
Wang’s team has used the Signature VM package in a range of projects. One of these projects encompassed current measurements for a new port in the vicinity of Caofeidian District, in Hebei, China.
“Our customer needed site-specific raw data of currents, waves, depth, turbidity, etc. for a new port in Caofeidian. Their purpose was to use the data to build a mathematical model for the port area. This was very important for the engineering work in connection with the construction of the new port and adjacent buildings,” said Wang.
His team selected two measurement sites according to their customer’s technical requirements.
“We surveyed along these two sites back and forth in several rounds to obtain complete data sets of the whole tidal process in the area. Each round of measurements took about an hour, and we performed the measurements continuously 24 times, or almost 24 hours in total,” says Wang.
“This was really a great challenge for the technical system, as well as for the people in my team who conducted the survey. But the results proved to be excellent,” Wang adds.