Eureka
Home Advertise Magazine Events Eureka TV Directory
  


Subscribe

Professor with marine vision
06/11/2009 Email to a friend   Comment on this article
Tom Shelley interviews Professor Carl Ross about his vision of using composites in future cutting edge projects to make use of the planet's resources

Professor with marine visionProfessor Ross spent much of his working life on the design of pressure hulls for Royal Navy submarines, but has since applied his skills to the design of hulls to be made of composites for civilian submersibles that could work at much greater depths, and other novel pressure resistant fabrications that we intend to reveal details of in Eureka's December edition.

On a recent visit to his laboratory at Portsmouth University, he and his colleague Dr Andrew Little, showed us one of his pressure tanks capable of performing tests at 1200 bar, roughly equivalent to a water depth of 12km. This is deeper than the bottom of the Challenger Deep, the deepest spot in the World's oceans which goes down 11km.

When we asked why he was designing composite hulls to go to such depths, he responded that, "we see this as a real possibility for making deep diving submarines to assist the recovery of valuable commodities. For a start, we have got all that methane hydrate down there.

"There's about $1.25million worth for every person living on the planet. It's not going to cost anything like that much to retrieve it. We could burn it along with other fossil fuels and capture and deposit the carbon dioxide down there where it will become hydrate and stay there safely sequestered for tens of millions of years."

Although bathyscaphes - a free diving self propelled deep sea diving submersible - have been to the deep ocean depths, these consisted of steel spheres suspended beneath buoyancy tanks filled with petrol. If a practical submarine were to be made of steel, he points that that if it was 10m in diameter it would need to have a hull 2.7m thick making it, 'sink like a stone'. However, if made of composite it could be made much lighter and be quite practicable.
The other area where Professor Ross has been attracting some media attention lately is making used of North Sea offshore technology by building 'floating cities' to help house the world's growing population.

Since most of the surface area of the world is sea, he proposes the idea of living areas that would initially float, but would have, "hollow legs like an oil rig. These would each have a compartment at the bottom. After letting the legs down onto the ocean floor, material from the sea bottom would be sucked in to stabilise the structure. The idea is currently a finalist in the nPower Bright Ideas competition."

This idea has already taken root in other parts of the world. On 17th June 2009, Fuzhou Maritime Floating Island Development and Beijing Xinmin High-technology Investment signed a contract for the construction of a floating island resort project in Xiamen,China, complete with a 7 star hotel.
 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
Supporting Information
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/carl.ross/page3.htm
http://wallaceandgromit.npower.com/bright_idea.html
 
This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright 2012.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
 
Your comments / feedback
Do you have any comments or feedback on this article? Please contact us by filling in the form below.
NameHide name
Your Email Address
Comments
Send
Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Terms and Conditions

To comment on news stories or blogs you need to complete our 60 second registration process. Once completed this then allows you to download any and all white papers, register for e-zines and access our detailed supplier directory for FREE.

If you are all ready a registered user then enter your e-mail address and login.

You will need to have logged in prior to entering your comments in the boxes provided.

Please enter your email address to login and gain free access to this site.
 
If you are using this site for the first time registration is quick and completely free.
 
Register Now - Register Now


Email Address :  

Remember Me: - If this box is ticked you will be automatically logged in when you return.

Important: To protect your privacy, do not select 'Remember Me' if other users have access to the computer you are using.

View Privacy Policy
 
Related Companies
University of Portsmouth
 
 
Related News
‘Intelligent’ inverter can handle drive-related tasks without an external controller
 
3M unveils MPO solution for high density fibre connections
 
Zircotec to demonstrate novel coating process at Autosport International
 
Sensor sleeve could improve efficiency in the workplace
 
Profibus to support Engineering Design Show
 
 
Related Technology
Advanced Engineering Show 2011: Adressing material shortcomings
 
Cover story: Planet of the Apps
 
Collaboration key to industrial Ethernet
 
Innovation on show
 
Powering ahead to tomorrow’s designing
 
 
Related Events
Southern Manufacturing & Electronics 2012
 
Engineering Design Show 2012
 
 
Related Technology Spotlight
Better by design: Introducing the Engineering Design Show 2012
 
Conductive plastic shielding material
 
Food grade metal detectable plastics
 
Steering wheels made from polycarbonate-siloxane
 
Parker commercialises hydraulic hybrid system
 
 
Related Blogs
Financing Innovation
 
Are you hiding your light?
 
Fascinating, but has anybody got a use for this?
 
Changing with the market
 
What is the difference between an engineer and an FD?
 
 
Related Whitepapers
How to match today's laser cutting technology to application requirements
 
Why is engineering fluid dynamics the right choice for CFD analysis?
 
Optimised mould temperature control procedure using DMLS
 
Blind side riveting
 
 
Related Videos
iglidur materials for use in knife-edge conveyors
 
igus c-chain for continuous movement
 
igus QuickPin 2.0 makes cable design simple
 
Spelsberg els customised enclosures
 
An alternative to the traditional spring?