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Reducing the Barnacle Bill

Posted January 04, 2007 7:41 AM

From The Engineer:

Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a marine 'electric fence' to discourage molluscs from attaching to the hulls of ships, a problem known as biofouling, The researchers report promising results from early tests of their system, which shoots tiny electric jolts through the underside of a boat. In preliminary experiments, the current reduced the accumulation of marine life by up to 50 per cent. 'It's unlikely we would be able to prevent biofouling entirely due to the enormous diversity of fauna in the seas,' said Rodolfo Perez, a UW-Madison doctoral candidate of civil and environmental engineering. 'But even reducing the hull-cleaning cycle by just a bit would be a huge, tremendous advance.' Biofouling can cause drag, meaning ships could require up to 30 per cent more fuel. Ecological problems can also result from foreign species being introduced into unfamiliar waters.

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Guru
Popular Science - Weaponology - Scapolie, new member.

Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 1058
Good Answers: 8
#1

Re: Reducing the Barnacle Bill

01/05/2007 7:46 AM

The odd thing about this entry is that Popeye's enemy is called; Barnacle Bill! Scapolie.

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Power-User

Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Mumbai-57
Posts: 107
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#2

Re: Reducing the Barnacle Bill

01/05/2007 8:28 AM

Please send me address / name / e-mail of the person to contact to get this going on a commercial basis.

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Power-User

Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Bolingbrook Illinois, a southwest suburb of Chicago.
Posts: 367
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#3

Re: Reducing the Barnacle Bill

01/06/2007 12:44 AM

It's kind of hard to effectively "shoot" electricity through a steel hull and hope to get substantial coverage, especially in salt water. Maybe a heavy insulating paint (plastic) coat with a wire-strung surface? I think it would still need a capacitor discharge system to hope for something resembling distribution over the entire hull. Keep the hull cathodic and you would also stop corrosion. It might also help repel endangered species.

RichH

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Associate

Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 26
#4
In reply to #3

Re: Reducing the Barnacle Bill

01/09/2007 1:11 AM

that sounds promising. its interesting from a corrosion prevention perspective.

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