SUSTAINABILITY, cilt.17, sa.24, ss.112451-1124526, 2025 (SCI-Expanded, SSCI, Scopus)
It is recognized that a ship’s performance, speed, fuel consumption, and resistance are impacted by the marine environment. The magnitude of this effect, which can be altered by ship design and operational conditions, necessitates added resistance calculations for optimizing these phases. Ship designers can generate efficient hull forms and operators can make sound navigational decisions to reduce emissions within the service zone. For this research, air and wave resistances were calculated using the KCS hull form with a superstructure during a simulated voyage in the North Pacific Ocean. To verify the results, data from towing tank tests available in the literature were used, along with calm water resistance calculations obtained from a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis conducted for this study. When transporting 3600 loaded containers, sea conditions at model-scale impact the ship’s power requirements, leading to air resistance from the superstructure (aerodynamic) and hull resistance from head waves. This research compares the increased wave and air resistance with calm water resistance to provide important insights into the main engine power requirements when traveling in this region. Cruising between 14 and 18 knots generates 8–11% added resistance when encountering head waves at Sea State 5.