IQIP AND DELFT UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY START JOINT WORK

News published on 8 November 2020

IQIP and Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) start their joint work on the monopile drivability investigation of the BLUE Piling Technology. The BLUE Piling Technology, a new monopile installation technique, is being developed by IQIP, the market leader in hammers for monopile installation. Together with TU Delft, a project has been initiated whereby the hydro-mechanical interactions between a monopile and the surrounding soil during installation are investigated in depth.

BLUE Piling Technology

BLUE Piling Technology reduces underwater noise levels by creating a gentler blow – when compared to the conventional impact hammers – to install offshore monopiles. This gentle blow is delivered using a large water volume which delivers a longer blow duration on the monopile. As a result, the vibrations of the pile wall reduce, generating less underwater noise. In order to make accurate predictions of the drivability of monopiles, the effect of the longer blow duration will be investigated.

IQIP is currently testing improvements in the technology on a small-scale hammer and these improvements will be implemented in a full-scale hammer next year. Meanwhile, a team of geotechnical experts at the Geo-engineering Department at TU Delft are investigating the details of the soil-pile interaction during installation using advanced physical, analytical and numerical modelling techniques. A miniature scale model of the BLUE hammer is being designed and constructed at TU Delft, which will be combined with a heavily instrumented model monopile to conduct detailed parametric studies on the complex soil-pile-water interactions in various conditions. These novel tests will be conducted in the geotechnical centrifuge under 50 times Earth’s gravitational acceleration field (50g).

“It is clear that the industry is urgently looking for installation techniques that can reduce the environmental impacts during installation. We see that current technologies are reaching their limits. It is therefore of great importance to address the underwater noise at the source. By reducing underwater noise levels at the source directly, the industry can save millions of euros on noise mitigation measures.”

– Technical Director IQIP.

In the summer of 2020, IQIP joined forces with Delft University of Technology to start the investigation into the soil-pile interaction of the BLUE Piling Technology. This development has received funding from the Dutch Government Agency RVO (Rijksdienst voor Ondernemend Nederland).

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BLUE Piling Technology – The next generation of pile driving

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