Super high speed ships - Upgraded


Super high speed ships that changes a game in transportation 
For the present, it is without any consideration of upper water sructure of the ship, i.e its aerodynemic drag force
It is later upgraded by other posts
Authaor: David Judbarovski, principle inventor, retired engineer, Israel 
Archive since 2006 yr.: http://judbarovski.livejournal.com
Here it is disclosed and evaluated quite detailed an incredible sea transport, had been published as a principle invention idea and was archived in Russian in my blog more than 10 years ago (2007-02-18 10:37:27), but isn’t noticed in the world.
The said ships promise to deliver cheaply a big quantity of cargo and passengers as a conventional sea ships, but as quick as aircrafts.

A key element of my invention is to add the water steam cocoon to the hull of conventional design of ship. Such method allows the friction losses of energy to be practically zero, so the hydrodynamic losses to be practically zero too, if following to the classical hydrodynamics theory for ideal environment, and if front flow power being considered as removed/pumped water environment by the sharp ship’ nose, further divided by a time of the pumping, while evidently that loses because the water viscosity are much less than the said pumping energy.

If unform pressed air cocoon around the ship’s hull to be created, it is a big problem, the uniform water steam cocoon around the ship’s hull below the waterline can be created by electrical evaporation of the water along a surface of the ship’s hull below its waterline. The said water evaporator can be a simple thin metallic lattice gapped from the ship’s hull and isolated by thin covers including thermal insulation of the said hull.
Certainly, such evaporation consumes a lot of additional energy, but not critical quantity.

Below I show numerical evaluation for CAPEX and OPEX for such ships and cost of transportation. At first, it is for small cruise ship for passengers with luggage, and it is demonstrated by detailed calculations, and then I show the evaluations results for cargo ship and for destroyer as examples as a civil application as a military one. Anyone can repeat those results and for any other cases, using my technics of evaluation here disclosed clearly.  

Examples:
(1) Small cruise ship of 50 m length, 7 m beam, 10 m height if a nose angle 30 grades and with ratio of deadweight tonnage to displacement being 0.2 and cruise velocity 900 km/h = 250 m/s
The water pressure on the nose is P = k * 1000 * tan (30/2) * 0.5 * 250^2 Pa.
k<< 1, because the front water flow is forced out to the water surface by the shock. And the shock of 900 km/h is so big, that water replacement goes practically the all in the air as a wave with k * 1000 ~= 1.3 approximately. It is extremely helpful for our case of our super high-speed, but for now used speeds no more than 100 km/h it used as a reason to make the ships’ noses tilted back and above and thickened below. So P ~= 10.000 Pa = 0.1 bars = 1.0 m of the water forming a wave some meters and tens meter width along the ship route.
Volume of the water removing by the nose is 0.5 * 7 * 0.2 * 10 * 7/ tan (30/2) = V m3 = 183 m3, and a time “t” of its removing is (7/2)/ tan (30/2) / 250 = 13/250 = 1/19 sec.
So the Q is V/t ~=183 *19 = 3500 m3/sec, and draft power is Q * P = 3500 * 1 = 3500 kW.

The water steam cocoon consumes another about 9,000 kW electricity for compensation of the cocoon condensation by cold water environment.
Really,
The said steam is about 2 bars, so it is 120 Centigrade condensed at cold water surface “S” a little bigger than  the ship’s hull below waterline, and being about 2 * 10 * 50 * 2 + 50 * 7 = 550 m2.
2 * 10^4 * 550 = 11,000 kW.
I can recommend the cocoon thickness to enhance before reaching the cruise velocity, and it needs in order of magnitude less power than 11.000 kW, and then to support the thickness by all of that power.

The total power would be about 15,000 kW for 900 km/h to serve for 1000 passengers with total luggage more than 100 ton and no any seasickness, because very high velocity, and  with much more comfortable travel, than it can give aircraft and  enjoy by fanny USD 50.0 for ticket to compensate CAPEX and OPEX for 5,000 km race and to give USD 25 million annually as a net profit for that business with the said ship alone after three years of payback return.  

(2) Cargo ship of 20,000 Dwt, DWT ratio = 0.82, 700 km/h, 10 ton-km = 4.5 cents. Such one ship can substitute 250,000 ton tanker, because much more short turnover.

(3) Destroyer, 15,000 displacement, DWT ratio = 0.25, W ~= 600,000 kW, can deliver rapid reaction force to any point of the Earth less than in 24 hours.          

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