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2014/12/15【Interactions in Offshore Foundation Design】Prof. Guy Houlsby

::: 2014-12-09 15:49:01
 
ABSTRACT:
 
Offshore foundation design has been a research topic with direct practical applications for a number of
decades, with the increasing need to generate power by harvesting offshore wind presenting new
challenges. The lecture will use examples from offshore foundation design to illustrate important areas:
(a) where geotechnical engineers need to address engineering problems in which phenomena interact in
a way that cannot be separated, and (b) where their interactions with other disciplines are important.
The first example is drawn from the assessment of the safety of installation of jack-up units (large
mobile offshore drilling rigs). It will illustrate how more rational approaches can be achieved through a
deeper use of probabilistic methods in both the prediction of performance and the assessment of field
observations. The second example also comes from jack-up practice, but has very wide application: it
will address the classical problem of the performance of foundations under combined loading, and how
this can be understood in a simple theoretical and practical framework.
The final example comes from the renewables sector, where the rapidly expanding offshore wind
industry poses new foundation challenges for geotechnical engineers. Practical and economic foundation
solutions are required if the UK is to meet its ambitious plans to exploit larger turbines in deeper waters.
Both conventional and novel solutions to the foundation problem will be discussed.
The lecture will demonstrate how interactions with other disciplines can enrich geotechnical
engineering, illustrated by specific practical examples from the author’s experience.
Guy Houlsby has been Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Oxford since 1991, and was
Head of the Department of Engineering Science from 2009 to 2014.
His main research is in geotechnical engineering, and he is an internationally recognised expert on
offshore foundations, where he has a particular interest in the understanding of the behaviour of shallow
foundations. Much of his recent work has been applied to foundations for offshore wind turbines. He has
also carried out extensive work in theoretical soil mechanics and plasticity theory. He has published over
200 scientific papers and is a past Editor of the ICE’s journal “Géotechnique”.
Recently he has developed a particular interest in renewable energy, and has a rapidly expanding
research group working on tidal power. He is a Director of the spinout company Kepler Energy Ltd,
developing tidal power systems using the novel “Transverse Horizontal Axis Water Turbine”
(THAWT).
He regularly lectures in the UK and abroad, and has acted as a specialist consultant in civil, geotechnical
and offshore engineering on many projects. He is a Fellow of the Institution of Civil Engineers and of
the Royal Academy of Engineering.