PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Retrofit-induced changes in the radiated noise and monopole source levels of container ships.

  • Vanessa M ZoBell,
  • Martin Gassmann,
  • Lee B Kindberg,
  • Sean M Wiggins,
  • John A Hildebrand,
  • Kaitlin E Frasier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282677
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0282677

Abstract

Read online

The container shipping line Maersk undertook a Radical Retrofit to improve the energy efficiency of twelve sister container ships. Noise reduction, identified as a potential added benefit of the retrofitting effort, was investigated in this study. A passive acoustic recording dataset from the Santa Barbara Channel off Southern California was used to compile over 100 opportunistic vessel transits of the twelve G-Class container ships, pre- and post-retrofit. Post-retrofit, the G-Class vessels' capacity was increased from ~9,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) to ~11,000 TEUs, which required a draft increase of the vessel by 1.5 m on average. The increased vessel draft resulted in higher radiated noise levels (5 dB) than the pre-retrofit ships in the low-frequency band and the reduction was greatest at low speed. Although multiple design changes occurred during retrofitting, the reduction in the low-frequency band most likely results from a reduction in cavitation due to changes in propeller and bow design.