Design and Research of a Propulsion-Enabled Station-Keeping Anchoring System Compatible with Shallow-Sea Profiling Floats
Profiling floats are important platforms for oceanic profile observations, yet they are prone to positional drift and grounding when deployed in shallow-sea environments. In order to address these issues, an aluminum alloy-based propulsion-enabled station-keeping anchoring system (PESKAS) is designe...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
MDPI AG
2025-04-01
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| Series: | Journal of Marine Science and Engineering |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/13/5/860 |
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| Summary: | Profiling floats are important platforms for oceanic profile observations, yet they are prone to positional drift and grounding when deployed in shallow-sea environments. In order to address these issues, an aluminum alloy-based propulsion-enabled station-keeping anchoring system (PESKAS) is designed in this paper. The PESKAS comprises anchor wings, thrusters, a steering connector, support frames, and an upper connection flange, which allows easy installation to the bottom of conventional profiling floats. Three anchor wings, with a cone angle of 40° and a length of 0.12 m, enable the attached profiling float to anchor to the seabed under ocean currents of up to 0.5 m/s when fully penetrating the sediment. Numerical simulation results show that achieving full penetration into clay, clayey silt, and silty sand requires thrust forces of 80–100 N, 100–120 N, and 160 N, respectively. To achieve full sediment penetration, the PESKAS employs a redundant quadruple-thruster configuration (total thrust 200 N) with an effective actuation duration of approximately 1 s. It ascends from the seabed via a thruster-generated upward force during the ascent of the profiling float, effectively avoiding grounding. Over a complete operational cycle (descent and ascent), the PESKAS consumes approximately 0.65–1.84 kJ of energy. Compared to the energy consumption of PROVOR profiling float motors (10.25 kJ) and sensors (8.33 kJ), the additional energy requirement for the PESKAS does not have a significant effect on the endurance of profiling floats. According to the results of the simulation experiment of the PESKAS, the system successfully achieves its design objectives of full penetration into and ascending from sediments. PESKAS is a cost-effective solution for the positional drift and grounding of profiling floats, which enables stable long-term profile observations in shallow-sea environments and has broad application prospects. |
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| ISSN: | 2077-1312 |