N Naw , OF fea of the Ultan f Se LAG ee THE OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM OF THE U.S. NAVY Accomplishments and Prospects SEPTEMBER 1967 pocUMEN' i ygas Hole Qceanogtanne - institution OFFICE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHER OF THE NAVY Alexandria, Virginia os ? pee, oo THE OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM ii Se MO 0033382 | il 0 0 i] MN OF THE U.S. NAVY Accomplishments and Prospects SEPTEMBER 1967-—————_ i D IC M a DATA LIBRARY. san ey WOODS HOLE OCEAN SRAPHIC INSTIDITIOM “Ce | Inc... “40 OFFICE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHER OF THE NAVY Alexandria, Virginia Rear Admiral O. D. Waters, Jr., USN Oceanographer of the Navy Foreword The United States Navy’s operations on, above, under, and from the ocean are vital elements in national security. Although all Navy activities are concerned with the ocean, Navy ocean engineering is concerned specif- ically with the development and support of advanced equipment and tech- nologies for underwater search, rescue, salvage, construction, environ- mental prediction, and related underwater endeavors. The purpose of this report is to provide the Congress, the Executive Branch, and the public with a comprehensive view of the Navy ocean engineering program, present and future. It includes those efforts managed by the Oceanographer of the Navy and closely related efforts monitored by him. The report outlines capabilities and technological developments, and includes short descriptions of representative engineering test and sup- port facilities. The Navy program necessarily makes demands upon many fields of technology and involves large segments of industry and academic institu- tions in its execution. The Navy plans to continue its leadership of ocean engineering and to share its knowledge with other national oceanographic programs to the maximum extent consistent with national security. il CONTENTS ORE WORD: lini cad ioe ah yey iA oe eelin eeu th NRO DUCTION: acts 2 hiss oe sates suetinnt Grokanl BAC OMOUTIC eee sees eur totes le oe ets, oe ze Leet Eurpose ot Navy. Oceanography 7555. 6-1) eee Relationship to the National Oceanographic Program Relationship to Other Navy Programs.......... Interaction With Industry and Academic Participants Navy Oceanographic Organization, Management, MING RAUCOUS copies STP eee wee che ean A alles Me Paneer National Needs and Ocean Engineering ........ NAVY CAPABILITIES IN OCEAN ENGINEERING Win@erseamVichiChess eer chal Saletan sn Nears let ae Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV) .... Deep Submergence Search Vehicle (DSSV) ...... DecprOcean Survey, Vehicle (DOSV)!]- 555 256) - Nuclear Powered Research and Ocean Encineenrine: Vehicle (NIR=I) yer ee oe Winmmanne deVieliicleSweeres set cs yeenen stn eee Controlled Underwater Recovery Vehicle (CURV) WinderseasenOber rote tariertr mle, Mareen eee ec SUD-=BOttOMES tAtlONSi com oc ee mie nis, 5c BOCtOMMmStAtONSee rey Seiinws a iene psi chee. iy ee Developmentsani salvage: i. tee ice ala Operational;SalyagerandislOolsmi ser is oe ies ote ili ol om relger le) ‘ole! je! ce) le) =) ee opie} Nene ieiiel (eune, JO. O10 "OO Oo 2 2 © © © ee ce 2 © © ew ew ew eo 8 © © © ew ew ii BBN NK DEVELOPMENTS IN TECHNOLOGY FOR WNDERSEAUMISSIONS 6 cee) io oe eee Structuresptor Deepssubmie4rsiblesia. 45-1 eee High-Strength Steels, Titanium, and Alumina ............ Glass andvuRemforced Blastics: |) 27. 145 oe oe eee Buoyancy Material terse ete elf ett ota eee Material Properties for Deep-Submergence Pressure Hulls Structures and Materials for Undersea Installations ........ [Snermg? (COMPSON ob cooecc oo doescooo nsec ooo sees Machinery for Ocean Engineering .......-.------------ WnderseaiManipulatorsi ernie ery lie) inhi NGOS NIE (COMM)! secasccccooovpsdgeoagdoo00ccce Sensors, Navigation, Controls, and Communications ........ Saturated Divingrvand) Sealab yer) see) eres acs ee Deep Submergence Biomedical Development ............ SealFloomEngineering et eyes ee es at. oe een Acoustical Oceanography ee) cri) ee eee DEVELOPMENTS IN ENVIRONMENTAL PREDICTION AND OCEANOGRAPHIC SURVEY ................-. Prediction of the Marine Environment (ASWEPS) ......... ShipboardesuiveyaSyStemin ss esien- ise) iene aeien ine Air-Seadntertace ys ms eeeys akg creo & cone Seek arse: eee eee Masnetics and) Gravity soe aime yer ie Ns sie cage 9, sacs ee Radiological’ Surveys) oc snc ateneite i es oe octane ote) eee ee CoastabEngineering: 2%). 4 Sie ion ellen ake ol orga in oes eee Hydrographic Surveying and Charting (HYSURCH) ........ Aetialusurvey, Mmechniquest ayes 14 lee ene omen Automation of ChartiProductiony )) 14) -ya\-> ee) eee OCEAN ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES .......... Oceanographic Instrumentation Centemey err OceangPressure: Laboratory, 15-45 ees eee cae ee OceansEngineeringelesteKacilitvas mci oe es oor DeeprOceant simulations eaboratonyeee eee ExpenimentaleDivingy Omit gees ors) eos ei) eh ee Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center @: le) Xe} ce) Leu ie! (a) oy hemiemerne OCEAN ENGINEERING AND A NEW INITIATIVE: DEERLOCEAN, TECHNOLOGY) aera serene onto = 110 Ocean Engineering and Deep Submergence .............. 110 A New Initiative: Deep Ocean Technology.............. WN * * * | SOMO IIE. ck Gaines aetie ¢ clisio os cin a ounemonc ce moncares c 115 APPENDIX A—Partial List of Navy and Navy-Supported Organizations Concerned with the Navy Ocean Mee COe AORN Seo Sec eos ce uo os 00 boob claus 116 syoodsoig LAY AZOTOUYIIT, UBIO Jo sIdIUOT sjuowysi|dwossy The Ocean Engineering Program of the U.S. Navy Accomplishments and Prospects INTRODUCTION BACKGROUND The Navy’s daily use of the oceans requires its interests in ocean engi- neering to be comprehensive and immediate. The Navy has performed sal- vage missions since Revolutionary War days, and Navy environmental pre- diction and charting predates the Civil War. Submarine development and diving have been actively fostered by the Navy since before World War I. Technological changes since World War II have extended Navy missions from a surface or near-surface arena down into the depths of the ocean. Increased numbers of longer range, deeper diving submarines have gener- ated new requirements for underwater search, rescue, salvage, and con- struction that did not exist ten years ago when the Navy purchased the bathyscaph TRIESTE. This is the purpose of Navy ocean engineering: to develop the vision and resources to produce the undersea capabilities that are required now and will be required in the future. Operational emergencies such as the loss of THRESHER and the Palomares bomb inci- dent lent urgency and emphasis to existing programs in ocean engineering. Daily the nation is becoming more aware of its economic, social, and defense interests that lie on our one million square miles of continental shelf and our surrounding oceans. In 1966 the President’s Science Advi- sory Committee Report, “Effective Use of the Sea,” was published con- taining concrete recommendations for national, federal, and Navy pro- grams in oceanography. In 1966 the National Council on Marine Resources and Engineering Development was established to provide a stronger policy and organizational framework and to give new momentum to marine science activities. 2 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM In recognition of the magnitude and importance of the Navy Oceano- graphic Program, and to assure program integration, the Secretary of the Navy in 1966 established the Office of the Oceanographer of the Navy, who is directly responsible to the Chief of Naval Operations. The Oceanographer of the Navy acts as the Navy Oceanographic Program Director for the Chief of Naval Operations, under the policy direction of the Secretary of the Navy, through the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research and Development). PURPOSE OF NAVY OCEANOGRAPHY Within the Navy, the oceanographic program encompasses that body of science, engineering, and operations, and the personnel and facilities asso- ciated with them, required to explore and to lay the basis for exploitation of the ocean and its boundaries for national defense and other national objectives. The urgent need for worldwide knowledge of the operational environment of its forces, and the variety of operations affected by one or another facet of that environment, impel the Navy to support studies in every major Oceanic area. Marine engineering and technological develop- ment, and theoretical and laboratory studies, complement these field inves- tigations and are equally comprehensive. In addition to efforts in support of the fleet and other defense forces, the Navy must meet responsibilities in the area of search, rescue, salvage, and ocean charting. The basic policy of the Navy is to provide the capability for the Depart- ment of Defense to fulfill its assigned mission of maintaining the security of the nation. The prime objective, then, is to increase the effectiveness of present operations. In fulfilling this objective, highly diverse oceano- graphic efforts are carried out through industry, Navy laboratories, uni- versities, and nonprofit institutions. RELATIONSHIP TO THE NATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHIC PROGRAM The Navy Oceanographic Program is an important element (about half) of the national oceanographic program, which includes the marine science programs of all federal agencies under the coordination of the President, with the advice and assistance of the National Council on Marine Re- sources and Engineering Development. Navy participation in the national INTRODUCTION 3 NATIONAL MARINE RESOURCES AND NAVAL PROGRAMS ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FOR MARINE WORK THE NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC PROGRAM NOT PART OF THE IS AN ELEMENT OF THIS NATIONAL PROGRAM. NATIONAL PROGRAM 500 —" eA : : 356.0 PRESIDENTS’ BUDGET FY 1968 I916 199 (SS) 100.0 100 “ (4A, NAVY 50 ANNUAL BUDGET (MILLIONS OF DOLLARS) ~N NSLGOGLA4OAEL,AAAAAAAA_ I XXSCG|OPS,G_A_|_|\|EALAAAAAST NSSMNKGELGSAAAAGAW’SI XYSYR_REBHEK]‘I3§UEASAl_0q 6O4Q4AAAAAAGAN 49.2 27.8 13.6 10 95 7.4 5.8 SS) 4.2 1, | 2 = © = ZZ : a S © n a [= 6) no ac i = =i WwW 2a oh Oe Sa ro} rag Qa Wr — > a > O Or oO 2 SO Ee 2 aq OC E =2 ro) fe) in| SS = Wut ar aqZz 2a oO = S oes oe ine ant fa NIG +2 Sie Se a Om 5S == alin ae SS ee im ts = ee moO Zetia ee a = Ore qwW AD © ro) Oo = W af (2p) ais c= oZWw = a 2 ~~ @O2 & a qsF wy Oo mae) = aS ~~ 6 = woe ae enol See at Ww Ed) ae Ww =fu = - DEPTH IN FEET HULL WEIGHT-TO-DISPLACEMENT RATIO ATLANTIC =----- : ey MARIANAS NOTE.” “HY” DENOTES YIELD STRENGTH ASSUMED IN CALCULATIONS TRENCH ----== PACIFIC 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 PERCENT OF OCEAN LESS THAN INDICATED DEPTH Depth capability as a function of hydrospace vehicle materials. The solid bar indicates a hull weight-to-displacement ratio of 0.5. The cross-hatched bar indicates a ratio of 0.7. 36 —— UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 37 Small undersea vehicles are usually composed of a single spherical shell or anumber of spherical shells either nested or connected by short stiffened cylinders. Additional structure consists of reinforced openings for such items as hatches, penetrating shafts, and electrical fittings. Submarines, however, are basically structural cylinders. Submarines and small undersea vehicles represent the only major engineering structures with small hull- thickness-to-hull-diameter ratios that are subject to relatively high external hydrostatic pressures. The submersible design must ensure structural sta- bility, because buckling of the shell can occur at pressures considerably less than those required to cause yielding of the hull. A submersible designed with a safety factor as high as required for most commercial pressure tanks would be so overweight that it could not ac- complish its mission. On the other hand, a serious responsibility rests with the designer to assign a realistic margin of safety. The Navy has supported theoretical analyses which provide upper and lower boundary predictions for the strength of pressure hulls. These have been well publicized and dis- cussed in various technical reports and publications. Certain strength- reduction factors must be applied to the theories in the design of a sub- mersible. This step is necessary because the strength is susceptible to such manufacturing variables as unavoidable local deviations from circularity or sphericity; residual stresses locked in the structure during fabrication due to rolling, machining, and welding; and mismatches of structural elements (such as frame hull connections, penetration reinforcements, etc.) which do not satisfy conditions of simple or fixed support assumed by theory. Additional factors influencing the design of a submarine include fatigue life, variations in physical and mechanical properties of materials, and various dynamic disturbances and local loadings. Because of these vari- ables, design formulas cannot be derived entirely on the basis of theoret- ical calculations. Suitable empirical relationships must be used where manufacturing and service variables exist. To establish these empirical relationships, the Navy has conducted and continues to support model tests to simulate the actual conditions which are prevalent in pressure-hull fabri- cation and which have an influence on service performance and on the ul- timate collapse strength. HIGH-STRENGTH STEELS, TITANIUM, AND ALUMINA The prime requisite for achieving the capability of “going deep” is the development of new materials. The current state of the art in material 38 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM technology has permitted the development of vehicles with useful pay- load capability for only modest operating depths and limited maneuver- ability. Extending our deep ocean capabilities will require advancement in material technology far beyond that required for any other application, including aerospace. A variety of materials are presently undergoing exploratory develop- ment. Materials with high compressive-strength-to-density ratios are re- quired to provide deep-submergence pressure hulls which will be buoyant and resist the high compressive loads imposed by great depths. Materials are being evaluated under environmental conditions simulating those to which the material will be exposed in actual operation. In this context, environmental conditions are taken to include not only the physical char- acteristics of the medium in which the material functions, but also the loads to which it may be exposed during its useful lifetime. The material requirements for “going deep” are numerous and include the development of materials for pressure hulls, piping and machinery sys- tems exposed to submergence pressures, and materials to augment deep- submergence vehicle buoyancy. It is important to note that for most applications not only must the structural material have a high strength-to-weight ratio, but also it must be weldable, tough, corrosion resistant, have good endurance properties, and be available in heavy sections at a reasonable price. High-Strength HY 130/150 Steel The Navy has sponsored the development of a 5% Ni-Cr-Mo-V steel with a yield strength of 130,000 to 150,000 psi. This steel has been given ex- tensive evaluation testing at Navy laboratories. The HY i30/150 is a quenched and tempered steel which has been metallurgically customized to have an optimum combination of strength and toughness for a given thickness. In comparison to the conventional submarine hull steel, HY 80, HY 130/150 steel features slightly lower Cr, higher Ni, and addition of V, lower carbon, and tempering at 1050° F rather than at 1225° F. Welding development at the low end of the range (130,000 psi) has been successful, and work is proceeding toward improve- ing the weld filler metal to a point comparable with or higher than the base metal (150,000 psi). HY 130/150 steel has been specified as the hull materials for the Navy’s Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV), which will be able to descend to UNDERSEA TECHNGLOGY 39 HY 130/150 steel cylinder model. This model was used to study fabrica- tion and the structural performance of welded HY-130/150 steel, the hull material to be used in the Navy’s Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV). at least 3500 ft. The DSRV pressure hull is made up of three small spheres (less than eight feet in diameter), which are joined together. High precision procedures are being used to fabricate the DSRV, and will be required on all deep submergence pressure hulls, regardless of size. The fabrication of deep submergence pressure hulls in shipyards will require extensive de- velopmental work, including fabrication trials to familiarize and train ship- yard personnel in large scale prototype construction for fatigue models and explosion-implosion and impact tests. HY 180/210 Steel Higher strength steels for the hulls of deep-submergence vehicles are being developed and evaluated. These steels are in the yield strength range of 180,000 to 210,000 psi (50 ft-lb Charpy-V-notch impact value). The steel plates should be weldable in sections up to four inches thick. Also being evaluated is HP-9Ni-4Co-XC steel, which is a quenched and tempered steel in which the cobalt is added to low carbon steel containing 40 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM more than 5 percent nickel. The special vacuum arc melting and special carbon deoxidation technology of this steel assures ultra-cleanliness and freedom from nonmetallic inclusions and such embrittling interstitial ele- ments as oxygen, nitrogen, or hydrogen. Maraging steels in the 180,000 to 210,000 psi range represent a new family of steels that have little similarity to the quenched-and-tempered steels. The strengthening mechanism involves a precipitation of micro- scopic particles throughout the matrix as the result of heat treatments known as “aging.” When the steel cools from austenitizing temperatures in the range of 1500° to 1900°F, it changes to an almost carbon-free soft and ductile martensite. Maraging steels have an advantage over quenched-and- tempered steels for small deep submergence pressure hulls, because such hulls are small enough to fit into the heat-treating furnaces, which permits aging after fabrication. Quenched-and-tempered steel pressure hulls are generally welded in the heat-treated condition, without postwelding heat treatment; this arrangement presents the problem of introducing excessive residual stresses. Titanium Alloys For the past five years the Navy has been supporting exploratory de- velopment of titanium alloys. Because of its high specific strength (ow density compared to steel and its 95,000 to 140,000 psi yield strength), titanium is an attractive material for deep submergence vehicles. Unalloyed titanium exists in the alpha (hexagonal close packed) crystal form up to 1620°F. Above this temperature, it becomes a beta (body- centered cubic) phase. Alloying elements can be added to strengthen the alpha structure or to modify the room temperature structure to an all-beta or mixed alpha-beta structure. The type of structure existing at room tem- perature determines whether the titanium alloy will respond to heat treat- ment, and whether it is sensitive to thermal embrittlement, which interferes with weldability. A 7A1-2Cb-1Ta titanium was tentatively selected as the hull material for the Navy’s first Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle, with capability of descending to 6000 ft. Evaluation of the 7-2-1 titanium revealed that the alloy was susceptible to stress corrosion cracking in sea water at relatively low stress levels so HY 130/150 steel was selected for the hull material. The HY 130/150 steel has a depth capability of approximately 5000 ft, while that 7-2-1 titanium is 6000 ft. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 41 Titanium alloy cylinder, hemisphere model. This model was used to study fabri- cation and structural performance of welded titanium hulls. Titanium, having a high specific strength, is undergoing considerable exploratory development as a future material for deep-submergence applications. The modification of the 7-2-1 titanium alloy to a 6A1-2Cb-1Ta-0.8Mo titanium has resulted in an alloy which is for practical purposes insensitive to stress corrosion but has lower strength. The 6-2-1-0.8Mo titanium alloy is now being evaluated for the Navy. An important part of the titanium program has been the fabrication work carried out at the Naval Applied Science Laboratory, Brooklyn, N. Y. The largest out-of-chamber weldment ever produced in 3 in. thick titanium alloy was produced at this laboratory. Alumina (Aluminum Oxide) A limited number of tests have been conducted on 10 in. alumina spheres, weight displacement equivalent to 0.25, fabricated by ceramic technique by an industrial contractor. The results showed high strength and little scatter. However, the spheres exhibited static fatigue behavior; i.e., strength varied with speed of testing. 42 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Alumina has considerable potential on a strength-weight basis, but more testing is required to determine its fatigue strength and corrosion resistance, and to firmly establish strength characteristics. The use of alumina, as in the case of glass, depends upon the successful application of a proof test to eliminate defective structures. GLASS AND REINFORCED PLASTICS Glass-Reinforced Plastics The Navy has been investigating glass-reinforced plastics for very deep (greater than 15,000 ft) operating pressure hulls. As a result of this in- vestigation the compressive strength of glass-reinforced plastics has in- creased from approximately 75,000 psi in 1961 to over 200,000 psi at the present time. This increase is attributed to improved fabrication and test- ing techniques as well as to significant steps in improving the plastic matrix material. Fiberglass reinforced plastic sphere, a recently developed low-density material for use as auxiliary buoyancy in deep-submergence vehicles UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 43 Three-foot-diameter glass-reinforced plastic deep-submergence pressure hull model awaiting hydrostatic pressure test. This model was hydrostatically tested to failure at 11,500 psi, equivalent to approximately 25,000-ft depth. Much development work remains to be done before this material can be considered for a manned pressure hull. Problems such as interlaminar shear, fatigue, water absorption, fabrication scale-up, and nondestructive test methods and standards are being investigated. A reinforced plastic cannot be characterized as a homogeneous material because it does not behave as a composite material until a structural ele- ment has actually been fabricated. Therefore, it is difficult to divorce structural response from performance characteristics of the material. New reinforcing fibers such as carbon fibers and high-strength metal fiber, as well as improved plastic matrix materials, are being developed. As a result improvements in the overall performance of composite materials for deep-submergence hulls are expected. Radial-fiber spheres uniquely utilize glass-reinforced plastic. Spheres are fabricated by a process which results in radial orientation of all glass mono- filaments held in place by an epoxy resin matrix. Compressive stresses of 200,000 psi have been achieved in these structures without failure. Massive Glass Because glass is almost perfectly elastic, and completely brittle, there are formidable problems in design, fabrication, and testing. While the 287-778 O - 68 - 4 44 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM theoretical tensile strength of massive glass is on the order of 1,000,000 psi, the practical tensile strength of massive glass is very low. This apparently contradictory situation is due in part to flaws on the surface of the glass which effectively reduce its strength. Surface-removal experiments have confirmed the surface-flaw theory. The surface of soda- glass rods 6 to 8 mm in diameter was carefully ground, which increased the tensile strength from 12,000 psi to over 400,000 psi. In order to retain the strength, the ground surface must be carefully protected. Another technique for increasing the tensile strength of glass is to place the surface in compression by chill tempering or by an ion-exchange proc- ess. In this way, the material can withstand tensile loading, the amount de- pending upon the process and depth of the surface layer. BUOYANCY MATERIAL In order to develop a low density material to be used for auxiliary buoyancy for deep-submergence vehicles, the Navy is investigating a number of approaches: syntactic foam, hollow massive glass spheres/syntactic foam modules, and radial-fiber-reinforced plastic spheres. Syntactic foam consists of extremely small hollow ceramic or glass spheres having an outside diameter of 20 to 90 microns embedded in a plastic matrix. This material in a bulk form has a density of 42 to 46 1b LARGE HOLLOW SPHERES —— SYNTACTIC FOAM MATRIX: 2 Buoyancy module. Low-density materials are used as auxiliary buoyancy for deep-submergence vehicles. This one is composed of a closely packed arrangement of large hollow glass spheres (all larger than %4-in. diameter), with the voids between spheres filled with syntactic foam. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY A5 per cu ft. The material has been tested to pressures equivalent to a 20,000 ft depth. The hollow massive glass spheres/syntactic foam material consists of hollow spheres of various sizes (all larger than %4 in. in diameter) in a close- packed arrangement. The voids between the spheres are filled with syn- tactic foam which is cured to form a solid module. The larger spheres are considered to be pressure hulls whose wall thickness is calculated to with- stand the external hydrostatic pressure. The syntactic-foam encapsulation may enhance this aspect as well as cushion the spheres from damage. This material is more efficient than syntactic foam alone, because it provides a larger air void per unit volume. Several problems remain unsolved: sym- pathetic implosion of the close-packed spheres, reproducibility of the spheres’ collapse strength, and a means for nondestructive testing. Syntactic foam, one of the low-density materials being developed for use as auxiliary buoyancy for deep-submergence vehicles. It is composed of hol- low glass microspheres embedded in a plastic matrix and has a density of 40 to 46 Ib/ft?. 46 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM MATERIAL PROPERTIES FOR DEEP-SUBMERGENCE PRESSURE HULLS To perform its function, the hull must withstand the pressure of the sea. Demands on the hull material are thus unique, and combine high values of stiffness, strength, lightness, toughness, and corrosion resistance. Modes of the collapse failure of the pressure hull include elastic buckling, plastic buckling, and fracture. Elastic buckling implies that the material recovers its previous shape as the load is decreased. Plastic buckling implies non- recoverable change in shape without increase in load. Fracture failure im- plies catastrophic crack propagation. Toughness and Fracture To date, pressure hulls for deep submergence vehicles have been fabri- cated from relatively low-strength metals such as HY 80 and HY 100 steels, because of their availability, fabricability, and toughness. These metals satisfy the requirements of the fracture-safe philosophy; i.e., the material can deform plastically in the presence of a through-the-thickness crack without catastrophic crack propagation and failure. For high-strength steels, toughness properties improve with special proc- essing such as vacuum melting. However, toughness decreases sharply with increased strength. Above the 200,000 psi yield level, fracture will propa- gate under essentially elastic stresses. It is possible to utilize fracture-safe metals for buoyant hulls to depths of around 6000 to 9000 ft. Beyond this, for a limited depth span, the high strength, relatively brittle metals can be used, provided that new toughness standards which, for example, relate flaw size to working stress, can be developed. It now appears that nonmetallic materials hold the greatest promise for vessels designed to go to great depths. Since tensile stresses may occur because of local bending near stiffeners, or because of elastic deformations in small cavities in the material, or follow from local plastic upset in compression, it is necessary to guard against brittle fracture in tension. Corrosion Fatigue Test results for HY 140 steel show that the crack-growth rate plotted against total strain range falls off in salt water in the region of the propor- tional limit and approaches the rate in air. The Ti 7-2-1 alloy undergoes an UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 47 increase in crack-growth rate well below the proportional limit in sea water as compared to air. STRUCTURES AND MATERIALS FOR UNDERSEA INSTALLATIONS The design of an undersea installation requires analysis of the struc- tural and environmental behavior of materials in the deep ocean. Mate- rials such as steel, aluminum, concrete, ceramic, plastic, and wire rope are presently available for building undersea installations. The behavior of materials in the deep ocean when exposed for long periods of time must be determined. Engineering experiments are underway to determine the effects of the deep ocean environment and bottom sediments on the corrosion of con- struction materials. Submersible Test Units (STU’s) carrying specimens of metal, plastic, ceramic, wood, wire, rope, and fiberglass have been placed on and retrieved from the ocean floor. The Navy under this pro- gram has exposed 11,000 samples of 800 materials at depths of 2500 Submersible test unit 1—4 being brought aboard after 13 months exposure at 6780 ft. This unit contains approximately 1800 specimens of metal, plastic, ceramic, wood, wire rope, and fiberglass. 48 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM and 6000 ft. The 2500 ft depth was chosen because it is the level of minimum oxygen concentration at the test site. The 6000 ft depth repre- sents a deep-sea environment on the edge of a major basin beyond the range of present construction operations. Results of the STU exposures indicate that corrosion rates for mild steels and high strength, low alloy steels at 6000 ft depths are about one third those at the surface for periods of 400 days or more. Additional results to date indicate: (a) the corrosion rates of the copper- base alloys decreased with time; (b) pit depths and corrosion rates of most aluminum alloys increased with time; (c) titanium alloys with one excep- tion were immune to corrosion; (d) depending upon the chemical composi- tion, some nickel-based alloys corroded, while others were uncorroded. Application of concrete hulls to undersea installations requires the de- sign, fabrication, and testing of typical spherically shaped models. Experi- ments with spherical concrete hulls of 16 in. outer diameter and one-inch shell thickness have shown that concrete may be suited for underwater applications to depths of about 3500 ft. In the models tested, the con- crete spheres failed at depths of 7000 to 7400 ft, which represents a stress level 46 percent higher (biaxial compression) than identical control cylinders (uniaxial compression). The seepage of seawater through unprotected concrete at depths of 3500 ft was found to be 6 x 10° milliliters per square inch of surface per inch of thickness per hour—very slight. Precoating the spheres with epoxy or self-vulcanizing rubber compounds stopped the seepage com- pletely. Other compounds, such as asphalt or tar, promise much more economical waterproofing for large concrete structures. To determine the extent of creep under high compression, several con- crete spherical models were pressurized to 80 percent of their short term critical pressure. When subjected to long term hydrostatic pressurization at a 6750 ft depth, the creep rate immediately after pressurization was high, but declined rapidly and became constant after approximately 50 hours. The creep rate at a 13,600 psi stress level was 30, 4, 0.3, and 0.02 microinches per inch per minute after five minutes, one hour, 30 hours, and 60 hours of pressurization, respectively. To provide engineers with data on the safe operational pressure for acrylic windows employed in deep ocean installations, engineering experi- ments are underway on the most important dimensional parameters. The first phase of experiments examined the strength of cone-shaped acrylic —<—<«—_ UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 8 Gane { | Specimen Depth Pacific Ocean 7 + 5,500 feet 2,350 feet 4 Alloy steels O ® Cast irons A A Austenitic cast irons Oo | J 6 a Atlantic Ocean Surface 5,600 feet Wrightsville Beach, N. C. 5 | N Mild steel x aa VS Carbon steel Vv High strength-low alloy steel Corrosion Rate (mpy) EN 400 600 800 1,000 Exposure (days) The statistical median corrosion-rate curves for three classes of alloys exposed in the Pacific Ocean are plotted to show the effect of time at depth and the effect of depth in seawater. Corrosion rates are given in mils per year. Surface data for mild steel exposed in the Atlantic Ocean at Wrights- ville Beach, N.C., and data from a depth of 5600 ft are shown for comparison. The corrosion rates at both depths in the Pacific decreased with increase in time of exposure. At a nominal depth of 5500 ft, the rates became asymptotic with time. 1,200 49 50 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM 4 eee i 5,500 Feet 2,350 Feet Alloy steels © ®@ 3 ‘ ZS Cast irons a & Austenitic cast irons ) 3 fa 2 2 i) oO 2 3 O ] 0 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 Exposure (days) The statistical median curves for the materials in the bottom sediments at a nominal depth of 5500 ft are the same as those in sea water at this depth. However, the corrosion rates tended to increase slightly in the bottom sedi- ments at the 2350-ft depth. Concrete sphere specimen (16-in. diameter) being lowered into 18-in.-diameter pressure vessel at NCEL for hydrostatic tests at an equivalent ocean depth of 7000 ft. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 51 windows under short term hydrostatic loading at room temperatures. Specimens consisted of 30, 60, 90, 120, and 150 degree included-angle, conical, acrylic windows. Approximately 40 specimens were tested for each included angle. Re- sults show a considerable gain in critical pressure for most windows when the included angle is increased from 30 to 60 degrees, but less gain from 60 to 90 degrees. Any gain in increasing to 120 and 150 degrees is not significant. For all practical purposes, the 90 degree angle appears to be a significant design factor for windows exposed to near-critical pressure over long periods of time. The factor will be examined in long-term window developments. The second experimental phase produced design criteria for flat acrylic windows for any ocean depth under conditions of short-term loading. The flat windows under short-term hydrostatic loading were found to be comparable in performance to conical windows with a 90 degree included angle. 32 28 24 20 | Flat circular disc windows (| 90-deg conical windows Pressurization rate - 650 psi/min Critical Pressure (psi x 103) o Temperature - 65 =75°F t - Thickness of window 4 D - Diameter of window flange opening on the viewer's side 0 a < 0° 1 1 SL 1 1 alt 1 ai 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 6 Wz OFS One 1.0 t/D Design chart for two types of acrylic windows subjected to short-term hydrostatic pressures. For example, a 90-degree conical window designed for 16,000 psi must have a t/D ratio greater than 0.5, or a thickness of not less than 2 in. with a diameter of 4 in. 52 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The third experimental phase, in progress, is examining a series of specimens of conical acrylic windows of 30, 60, 90, 120, and 150 degree included angle exposed for periods of 500 and 1000 hours. The windows are instrumented to provide data on their rate of displacement through their mounting flange. Other engineering analysis on the application of concrete has included the testing of typical spherically shaped models for 1500 psi operational pressure. A 16in. diameter waterproofed concrete model, with opera- tional windows, hatches, and wire feedthroughs, under simulated design depth, was tested as an indicator of how well a concrete pressure hull with penetrations can withstand hydrostatic loads. Several identical models with solid steel, aluminum, and plastic penetration inserts were tested. The models, with operational windows, hatches, and feedthroughs, failed under short-term pressurization at simulated depths of 7400 ft, the same depth at which models without any penetrations failed. When the solid inserts possessed rigidity equal to or greater than the concrete, the models failed at the same or higher pressure than models without penetra- tions; on the other hand, when the inserts were less rigid than the concrete, the models failed at significantly lower pressure. Acrylic hull models are being tested as part of the program to investi- gate acrylic plastics as underwater hull material. Evaluation of acrylic plastic hulls consisted of subjecting a series of 15 in. outer diameter, one- half-inch-thick spheres with metallic hatches to long-term submersion at simulated 560, 1120, 1680, and 2240 ft depths. Only the hull model sub- jected to a simulated 2240 ft depth failed, after ten hours of continuous pressure application. The models under simulated 560 and 1120 ft depths did not fail after 3000 hours of pressurization, and the model at the simu- lated 1680 ft depth was still intact after 1000 hours. Underwater lights, instruments, and electronic assemblies require both waterproof and pressure-proof packaging for successful operation. Due to the high cost, limited availability, and limited variety of commercial deep- sea instrument housings, experiments were undertaken to explore the applicability and usefulness of commercially available glass closures, such as those used in vacuum technology and the chemical industry. These items have the advantages of wide distribution in the laboratory supply industry and low unit cost. Investigations are continuing to determine their capability to withstand high hydrostatic pressure and to demonstrate their utility in the undersea engineering field. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 53 ENERGY CONVERSION The major candidates for deep ocean power applications are secondary batteries, chemically fueled dynamic-machinery powerplants, fuel cells, and nuclear powerplants. Analysis of specific weight versus mission time curves shows clearly the time ranges that best fit the major candidate systems. The curves are based on comparative parametric analyses of several battery, chemical (fueled dynamic-machinery), fuel cell and nuclear systems with an assumed 50 kw maximum sustained power out- put. The curves give the weight for fuel and oxidant with associated tankage. In considering the weights of the systems in air, no allocations for material necessary to achieve neutral buoyancy were included, nor were weights of any pressure capsules required, other than atmospheric tankage for oxidant and fuels. These factors may alter the relative attractiveness. Dynamic-machinery systems considered cover the range from high power density turbomachinery systems fueled by cryogenically stored hydrogen and oxygen to lithium hydride thermal energy storage with a Stirling-cycle engine. The low machinery weights potentially achievable with high-speed dynamic systems could provide superiority in specific weight over other plants for fuel endurance times in the range of ten to 20 hours. Efficiency of fuel energy conversion becomes a dominating factor in overall powerplant weight for chemically fueled systems when mission times exceed ten hours. This fact is demonstrated in the lower specific weights obtainable with fuel cell systems. Fuel cell systems represented by the range of weight-to-energy data considered include hydrogen-oxygen systems supplied by cryogenically stored reactants, alkali metal amalgam- oxygen systems, and hydrazine-hydrogen peroxide fuel systems. They also represent a range of systems designed for one-atmosphere operation, which must be protected from deep ocean pressures in hardened pressure cases, to those designed for operation at ambient sea pressures. Analysis of the data available indicates that fuel cell systems are par- ticularly attractive for deep submergence vehicle power supplies with en- durance requirements in the range of 20 to approximately 200 hours. Radioisotope power sources are needed as small power sources for long- life acoustic beacons and various types of oceanographic instrumentation. A program of test and evaluation in both laboratory and undersea environ- ments of state-of-the-art radioisotope power sources is underway. 54 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM BATTERIES OR CHEMICAL DYNAMIC FUEL CELL POWERPLANT SYSTEM SPECIFIC WEIGHT (LB/KW-HR) 0 10 100 1000 MISSION TIME OR FUEL ENDURANCE (HR) Preliminary tradeoff analyses indicate that batteries and fuel cells merit the most consideration for application to relatively small deep-ocean submersibles that will be Operational within the next decade. The other candidate systems, particularly nuclear powerplants, will require more development effort and will probably be con- sidered for larger deep-ocean vehicles and bottom installations. Battery data are for the one-hour discharge rate. The rechargeable wet-cell battery is the only energy source in use on present small deep diving submersibles. Based on energy density and the state of the art, four couples merit consideration as power sources: nickel- cadmium, lead-acid, silver-cadmium, and silver-zinc. Energy density varies from approximately 15 watt-hours per pound for lead-acid to approxi- mately 35 watt-hours per pound for silver-zinc. Navy-sponsored studies being conducted on silver-zinc cells show promise of higher energy-density figures. In selecting a power supply for the DSRV, capacity attainable within restrictive size and weight limitations were important design considera- tions. The silver-zinc battery was selected because it will produce more energy per pound than other available batteries. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 55 Progress has been made in the development of open- and closed-cycle dynamic powerplants in recent years. A number of solid, liquid, and gaseous fuel/oxidizer combinations are feasible for closed-cycle energy- conversion loops. However, it appears that chemical-dynamic heat engines cannot approach the efficiency of fuel cells. Lightweight conversion equipment for this type of powerplant which will allow a relatively low fixed weight is available or realizable. MACHINERY FOR OCEAN ENGINEERING The extreme weight sensitivity of small deep-sea vehicles imposes severe restraints on the machinery-system designer from concept to the end of construction. Small, lightweight systems must be achieved without degrading the safety, reliability, efficiency, maintainability, and many other factors which contribute to the overall suitability of the vehicle. To minimize pressure hull penetrations, much of the machinery is located outside the pressure hulls. This equipment must either be en- capsulated in a pressure-resistant container or designed to operate at sea pressure in a compensated system. The first alternative permits the use of more conventional equipment at the expense of the weight of the pressure container, the provision of high-pressure seals, and the inherent tisk of flooding the container. The second alternative avoids these risks but raises other problems in design of machinery which must operate over a range of ambient pressures varying from sea level atmospheric to the maximum design depth of the vehicle. Equipment that is inherently resistant to sea water erosion may be directly exposed to the sea water. However, much equipment (electrical equipment and speed reducers) must be surrounded with a more com- patible liquid (insulating oil) and compensated to sea pressure. The effi- ciency of high-speed rotating equipment is significantly affected by the hydraulic losses encountered in such a system. The requirement for guard- ing against contamination of the compensating liquid introduces additional system complexities. These considerations are particularly important in the propulsion area, because the overall suitability of the vehicle to perform useful tasks in the hostile deep-sea environment will depend in a large degree on its speed, maneuverability, endurance, and reliability. Many comparative studies are required to provide a basis for selection of the optimum propulsion plant. 56 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The design of the nonpropulsion machinery systems for deep vehicles which places emphasis on lightweight, high-performance systems is the same. At the start of most deep vehicle design efforts, many of the per- formance requirements are not firm. Each system must be investigated over a wide range of possible design goals. The development of such infor- mation requires a much more detailed analysis of the systems than nor- mally is required for large-ship preliminary designs. Shortcut methods of estimating weights and performance of systems are not adequate to pro- vide the precise weight, space, and performance data essential for small deep vehicle designers. Conventional large submarine approaches to the problems of heating, cooling, and atmosphere control are often not feasi- ble due to the extreme space and weight limitations. As such, the actual endurance of many deep vehicles is limited by these life support systems. Electric Motors Applications for undersea motors include mechanical power for con- struction machines and mechanical power for vehicle and fixed installa- tions. The electric power sources available for use on small deep- submergence vehicles are direct current sources. In order to eliminate shaft penetrations, decrease the size of pressure spheres, and increase buoyancy, the propulsion and thruster motors can be mounted exterior to the pressure hull. The motors are subjected to full submergence pressure. Most of the motors being used in deep submergence applica- tions are dc, oil-immersed, pressure-compensated motors. These motors have not been satisfactory because of brush wear, brush arcing, and oil carbonization. In addition, contamination of oil by sea water may render dc motors inoperative. A Navy contract has been awarded to design, construct, and test a prototype ac system for the DSRV. The system will include pressure- compensated ac motors and inverter/controllers for each of the motors. The contract provides for purchase of one 15 HP propulsion motor, two 7% HP hydraulic motors, four 7% HP thruster motors, and the inverter controllers for each of the motors. A contract has also been let to construct and evaluate a feasibility model of a “Nadyne” propulsion motor and converter unit suitable for use on deep submergence vehicles. These motors are ac but promise good speed regulation. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 57 Propeller Systems for Submersibles To date, several propeller and thrust-producing components have been developed for naval application. They include conventional thrusters, such as stern propellers and propellers mounted within a pod, and also fluid thrusters, such as water jets. At present, the technology and design capability is available to develop an advanced propeller concept, the tan- dem propeller. Future submersibles performing work tasks will need to be able both to maintain depth position and to exert with precision large forces and moments. Development is planned of the tandem propeller concept for providing submersibles controlled thrust in the six degrees of freedom. Developments to provide reliability in electrical components are under- way in critical areas such as electrical hull penetrators, electric cabling, underwater connectors, insulating materials, and fluids and encapsulation materials for use in a high pressure sea water environment. Usable examples of each of these components have been successfully tested in the environ- ment by the bathyscaph TRIESTE to about 8500 ft, but reliability re- mains a goal which must be achieved to provide for operational safety. UNDERSEA MANIPULATORS The first manipulator fitted to a Navy manned submersible was a modi- fied nuclear hot-cell mechanical arm. This manipulator was used on the TRIESTE I and in 1963 recovered a piece of pipe from the submarine THRESHER in 8500 ft of water. The arm was oil filled and pressure compensated to exclude sea water. It was designed to handle weights up to 50 pounds at a 39 in. reach with a two-jaw clamping grip. All motions of the manipulator were powered by electric motors. The TRIESTE II manipulator had a lift capacity of 500 pounds at a teach of 10 ft. It was hydraulically actuated by a remotely controlled external hydraulic system mounted on top of the float structure. Because of TRIESTE IIs arrangement, the manipulator was mounted aft of the personnel sphere and viewed with the aid of a television camera. With knowledge gained from the efforts on TRIESTE I and II as a basis, Navy turned to industry for a study to integrate the operator, the controls, manipulators, tools, and viewing aids into a coordinated system. Using this study the manipulators were designed for the AUTEC ve- hicles. These vehicles, now under construction, will have a pair of arms 58 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM SHOULDER Manipulator developed for TRIESTE II and used in the THRESHER search mounted near the viewports and a set of tools for underwater use. The manipulators have seven degrees of motion and are anthropomorphic in design. Hydraulic power is used for actuation. Controls inside the per- sonnel sphere allow the operator to control the arms to perform tasks. The manipulators also have the capability of exchanging tools underwater. This ability allows several tools to be used without surfacing for tool change. A sample basket is also available so that geological samples or living specimens may be brought back. These manipulators are part of a continuing effort to provide the Navy with a manipulator system to do useful work in the ocean. ATMOSPHERE CONTROL The atmosphere control program embraces all aspects of control of atmospheres in submersibles to insure viability and comfort of personnel. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 39) Deep-submergence vehicle ALVIN rigged for a science mission. Drop- pable working tray is shown in place, with mechanical manipulator and bottom working tools for a geologic dive. Chemical and electrochemical devices for oxygen replenishment have been developed for limited or unlimited submergence periods. These developments include not only means for oxygen supply alone but also research into devices which provide dual or multiple functions such as CO, and CO removal. Other important problems include effects of oxygen concentration on combustibility of materials and the characteristics of oxygen and inert gas mixtures, under various conditions of pressure. Regenerative and nonregenerative physical and chemical systems have been developed for removal of carbon dioxide from the submersible atmosphere. Another requirement is the elimination of odors and contaminants such as carbon monoxide, volatile hydrocarbons and organics, aerosols, and particulates. This requirement can be met by physical and chemical 287-778 O- 68-5 60 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM means such as catalytic burners, activated carbon, electrostatic precipita- tors, and filters. Important elements of this problem include source control by materials selection and development of nontoxic materials, and toxico- logical studies to determine outgassing, dangers of submersible materials, and allowable limits of atmospheric contaminants. Atmospheric monitor- ing instruments and controls and systems for heating, cooling, and de- humidification of the environment are also included. SENSORS, NAVIGATION, CONTROLS, AND COMMUNICATIONS Navigation is essential to any vehicle operating in any medium. It is particularly significant for undersea vehicles because of (a) the environ- ment in which they operate, and (b) the complex operations required to accomplish their missions. Operations in the ocean depths are conducted essentially in total dark- ness, with man-made lighting capable of penetrating only a few feet if the equipment can withstand the pressure, and if sufficient energy sources are available. There are no stars or other visible landmarks on which to base accurate navigation. Operations near the ocean floor, which are essential for most ocean engineering missions, tend to stir up bottom sediment which completely obscures what view is possible. Minute marine life, attracted by light, can also cloud viewports and camera lens. Coupled with these natural limitations are the complex operational requirements associated with deep submergence and ocean engineering. For example, effective search and survey missions require that a submers- ible be able to return to a precise location on the ocean floor. Several of the submersibles now being developed will be required to locate and then mate with fleet submarines—both underway and on the sea floor. The smaller submersible must come to rest directly atop the larger submarine’s hatch, an operation which calls for precise navigation and control. These requirements have led to an entirely new system of submersible sensors, navigation and control. Sensors and Navigation The early submersibles had basic sensors, and navigation and control systems. The primary sensor was the human eye looking through a view- port, possibly supplemented by a simple sonar system. Navigation was UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 61 based on a compass and stopwatch—assuming the vehicle’s velocity through the water was known. Control of the submersible’s movement and direction was by direct on/off control of motors. Improved equipment was available for second-generation submersibles, such as the ALVIN and ALUMINAUT, but their sensors, navigation equipment, and control systems were not integrated. An advanced and integrated sensor-navigation-control system has been developed for the DSRV because of the many complicated maneuvers required of this par- ticular submersible. The DSRV will be equipped with a total of six different kinds of sonars, all integrated with a timing coordinator, to avoid signal interference, and a master display system. It will use horizontal and vertical obstacle- avoidance sonars to detect objects in the path of the submersible. The vertical sonar, in addition to determining the height of obstacles ahead of the DSRV, will be used to interrogate a transponder carried by the mother submarine or surface-support ship during recovery operations. An altitude-depth sonar in the DSRV will have two transducers, one to determine distance from the submersible to the ocean floor and the other to determine distance to the surface. The DSRV pilot can select altitude or depth, or he can alternate the sonar pinging. These signals will be used to compute depth for digital display to the pilot and to produce an analog trace on a chart recorder. This sonar will be the prime sensor for main- taining a constant altitude over the sea floor, and will serve as an alterna- tive to the pressure-depth gages for depth measurement. Once near the sea floor the DSRV will use its doppler to measure ground track. This four-beam system determines fore-aft and athwart- ship velocities. It can also be used to find vertical velocity, which is required during the final stages of mating with the disabled submarine’s hatch. Velocity information will be displayed to the pilot and used by the central processor indead reckoning navigation computations. Directional listening hydrophones, mounted on each side of the DSRV control sphere, will permit the submersible to home on acoustic signals from a disabled submarine. As the DSRV closes with the disabled sub- marine, the submersible’s short-range sonar can be used to determine the attitude of the disabled submarine and locate its escape hatches when the water is too turbid for effective use of optical systems. This sonar will be equipped with two scales, one a 150 ft range and the other a 15 ft range. Two transducers, located in the DSRV mating skirt, alternately scan the area below the DSRV. The fore-aft scan will provide a cathode-ray tube 62 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM trace of returns parallel to the DSRV axis, and the athwartship scan will give a trace of the contour in the perpendicular direction. Near the dis- abled submarine the DSRV pilot will switch to the 15 ft high-definition scale to attempt to determine features on the submarine hull. If visual contact is made with the submarine, then the DSRV’s TV cameras and lights will be used in place of the short-range sonar. During the final stages of mating and hauldown on the submarine hatch, the for- ward pan-and-tilt assembly with its TV camera can view the submarine hatch area and the DSRV’s manipulator. Another TV camera will be located in a porthole in the mating skirt, and a second pan-and-tilt unit will be located aft of the mating skirt. The pilots will have the choice of using any of these TV cameras or remote-viewing optics to look directly out the viewports. In addition to the doppler sonar, the DSRV will have a miniature precision gyrocompass to provide an accurate indication of heading. This is a three-axis system, using three integrating gyros and two accelerometers as its sensors. This compass can furnish attitude information for the sub- mersible’s stabilization system, provide a reference for computation of velocities from the doppler system, and provide position information by operating as a miniature inertial system. Computations for the various navigation modes are performed in a central processor. This computer has both digital differential-analyzer and general-purpose subsections. A wide range of signal processing and com- putation can be accomplished by the computer, relieving the operators of many of the more time-consuming or difficult aspects of navigation. Pre- launch check out is also performed in large measure by the computer. As an alternate to dead reckoning and homing, the DSRV can navigate by means of transponders dropped from the support ships and homing trans- ponders carried by the rescue submersible itself. Once the DSRV has located the disabled submarine, the submersible will be able to release one or two homing transponders to facilitate return to a precise position. A tracking transponder in the DSRV will home in on the expendable transponder. The Deep Submergence Search Vehicle will carry out its coordinated search tasks while navigating with respect to one or more transponders, usually deployed from a support vessel. The transponders can be used either singly to reset a dead reckoning navigator or in groups as shown in the drawing. Groups of transponders are usually placed in rectangular pat- terns, one to three miles apart. Position fixes are obtained by range ee UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 63 800-W FLOOD LIGHT TRANSPONDER SHORT RANGE SONAR INTERROGATOR- connie DIRECTIONAL HYDROPHONE \ 250-W FLOOD LIGHT / HORIZONTAL OBSTACLE- AVOIDANCE - SONAR O of 9 ~ ~ Te S es ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ AFT THRUSTER DUCTS \\ Be See ll VERTICAL OBSTACLE- ~~ ALTITUDE VE, iI AVOIDANCE - SONAR SONI // | \ FWD THRUSTER DUCTS // || Ve MANIPULATOR 7. VX MATING SKIRT / /OOPPLER NAVIGATION (T-V CAMERA LIGHT, // SONAR Se DEWATERING EQUIPMENT) (i), | NEN y, | \\ / i | V\ / / i \ Lf || y\ ww) Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV) sensor, navigation, and control equip- ment locations. Many of these systems will be incorporated into the DSSV, which is presently in the planning stage. measurements from two or more transponders. Replies from several trans- ponders are distinguished by either different interrogation or reply fre- quencies. A typical navigation transponder when released by the DSRV would drop to the sea floor, and a float would lift the acoustic transducer about 300 ft above the bottom. The float is designed as a maximum buoyancy, minimum drag body to limit the watch circle (uncertainty) in float loca- tion caused by the ocean current. One of the limitations on range measurement arises from the bending of sound rays. In deep water, especially at depths greater than 6000 ft, sound signals are refracted upward. As a result, a shadow of the bottom masks signals from navigational transponders at ranges greater than two to three miles for submersibles operating in the vicinity of the bottom. Multipath interference causes another problem. Beacon returns usually include both the direct sound rays and rays reflected off the bottom. Since a typical beacon pulse width is 4 millisec, the reflected signal is only slightly delayed, and thus comes in almost simultaneously with the trans- mitted signal. This action can cause fading or complete cancellation of the 64 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM signal, depending on the exact nature of the sea floor. A number of tech- niques are being investigated which would improve the situation, including space-diversity reception and detection of the leading edge of the pulse. Transponder navigation is the only technique which offers accuracies to a few feet in deep ocean work. The beacons have both a high initial cost and high replacement cost, and are susceptible to shadow zones, multipath, and other interference in the transmission medium. However, the technique is the best method available of relating an ocean floor to geographic coordinates or relating a surface or subsurface vehicle to sea- floor-referenced coordinates. In addition to transponders, the DSSV will use the miniature precision gyrocompass and central processor developed for the DSRV. Because of the stringent navigation requirements for search, an effort will be made to improve these very promising systems. Navigation of unmanned vehicles will be accomplished in a similar manner. The towed vehicle can inter- rogate the same navigation transponders and telemeter replies to the tow- ing vessel. Compatible navigation will be essential if the DSSV is expected to investigate contacts obtained by an unmanned vehicle. Controls The DSRV and DSSV will operate in a three-dimensional environment and undertake a number of complicated maneuvers. On a typical rescue cycle the DSRV will perform at least ten principal functions: @ Takeoff from mother submarine (underway ) Navigation Communication Search Hovering and maneuvering Television/viewport viewing Manipulator control Mating with disabled submarine Takeoff from disabled submarine Landing on mother submarine (underway) The two DSRV operators would have a difficult time performing all of these functions if separate controls and instruments were used. Thus, an Integrated Control and Display (ICAD) system is being developed to co- ordinate sensors, navigation, display, and controls. All sensors, navigation, and propulsion equipment will provide electrical signals into the ICAD oe UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 65 computer. The data will then be translated into displays for the DSRV pilot and copilot. To control the vehicle the pilot and copilot will order direction and rate and the ICAD computer will translate these signals and provide exact control signals to the vehicle’s individual propulsion con- trol units. This vehicle control system must operate satisfactorily in the presence of disturbances such as ocean currents. Other critical control problems arise from crosscoupling between thrusters and from coupling terms in the equations of motion. The effect of the disturbances has been reduced to a tolerable level by such compensation techniques as high rate-loop gains and the use of decoupling networks. One of the difficult problems for submersible pilots is the relatively slow vehicle response. To reduce this effect and to avoid limit cycling which can arise from actuator saturation, the ship control system will use both command-rate limiting and forward-feed decoupling. An assisted manual control mode also helps the pilot hold station with respect to a target which is visible on his TV screen. Here, the pilot will position a synthetic marker over the desired location of the DSRV. In addition to the manual modes, the pilot can choose an automatic altitude and position-hold mode or an automatic maneuvering mode, where the DSRV is under the control of the central processor. When under computer control, the pilot merely provides translational commands to the computer. The search vehicle (DSSV) sensor, navigation, and control requirements will be similar to those of the DSRV. The ship control requirements for the DSSV will depend to some extent on the choice of vehicle design and propulsion. A search submersible must hover and maneuver at least as accurately as the DSRV. Side-looking sonar requires very low yaw and roll rates to ensure proper coverage. Further, the DSSV is expected to operate from a mother submarine, and thus must perform the same mating operation as the DSRV. Although operator display and control panels for the DSSV will be functionally similar to those of the DSRV, new sensors make an inte- grated and well organized display even more important. Methods will be developed to allow the operators to note possible sonar or optical targets, record their position, and still follow a coordinated search plan. Human- engineering techniques become important, since search missions are gen- erally long, and physical size of vehicle may limit crew rotation. 66 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Communications Communications are essential for operational coordination between submersibles and their support ships. Development of underwater voice and telemetry links for search and recovery operations have been initiated. These operations are planned to keep distances between submerged ve- hicles and their support ships close enough to permit the use of under- water sound for communication transmissions. This development for the DSRV and the DSSV will extend the range of underwater “telephones” now used by the Navy. The development is directed toward the provision of a communications capability at all depths down to 20,000 ft, with lateral separations of the submerged and support vessel up to three miles. The capability is to be provided for sea state 3 surface conditions, and for a reasonably uniform sound velocity profile across the transmission path. Along with the voice capability of the telephone, provisions will be made to enable the use of a transmitter- receiver for sending and receiving telemetry signals on a time-shared basis with voice signals. The telemetry portion of the system will process and transfer data on navigation, life support, and other submersible operations. The growing importance of saturation diving and underwater search, rescue, and salvage techniques creates the need for improvements in rela- tively short-range communications between the underwater base and surface support ship base and free swimmers, and between swimmers. Communication links from the underwater base to a surface support ship are now accomplished via a cable to a telemetry surface buoy. Unfortunately, the surface motion at high sea states degrades communi- cations through umbilical cable links. Operational acoustic links are limited to one mile ranges for voice-grade information transfer. The link from the underwater base to the free-swimming diver is opera- tional for short ranges (up to 300 ft) by direct voice acoustic transducers. For longer swimmer excursions, electronic receivers of the acoustic signal currently in use will give reliable performance and have been suitably miniaturized. When diver-to-base communications in excess of one mile are required, investigation into the use of a telemetering buoy system will be necessary. Diver-to-diver communications present a significant problem. In this case the development effort is directed at an adequate oral-nasal mask, a bone-conductive receiver-transmitter, and a solution to the problem of synchronous breathing. Solutions to these and related problems are being undertaken by the Navy. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 67 Voice distortion caused by the helium-oxygen atmosphere used by divers causes many unique problems in communications hardware develop- ment. The human voice in a helium atmosphere assumes a “Donald Duck” quality. This phenomenon becomes more pronounced as the pressure in- creases and eventually makes intelligible speech almost impossible. In an effort to overcome this difficulty, electronic devices have been developed which effect a frequency shift transformation on the voice, adjustable according to depth. Work is continuing in the miniaturization and im- provement of this helium voice unscrambler. Navigation for Divers Navigation systems are required for divers or diver-controlled vehicles just as in the submersible search operation. To be effective the divers must know where they are, how to get back to their habitat or transfer capsule, and which way to go on a search mission. For the individual diver, navigation can be a matter of life or death, since his breathing apparatus gives him a limited time in the water. Present limitations in this area may force the continued use of tethered divers—a serious restriction on the aquanauts. Techniques developed for submersibles approach the accuracy needed for divers—a matter of a few feet. However, submersible equipment is far too heavy and requires too much power. Furthermore, it would be un- realistic to expect the diver to perform significant computations while swimming. For this reason, simple ranging and directional systems will have to be developed that are lightweight and easily carried by the diver or his support vehicles. SATURATED DIVING AND SEALAB Until the late 19th century man’s efforts to penetrate the ocean depths as a diver were bound to developments in machinery such as diving helmets, diving bells, and air compressors. As divers went deeper and remained longer, their efforts were paced by physiological problems rather than engineering problems. In the 1870’s the cause of the “bends,” or decom- pression sickness, was diagnosed and a cure proposed: gradual decompres- sion. Other physiological problems arose involving oxygen poisoning and nitrogen narcosis. 68 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM In an effort to solve the problems involved with breathing compressed air in deep-sea diving, in 1924 the Navy and the Bureau of Mines con- ducted joint experiments with subjects breathing helium-oxygen mixtures under pressure. Animals were used in the early experiments, and by 1927 the work had progressed to the point where human subjects could be used. The Navy continued experiments with helium-oxygen gas mixtures for deep- sea diving. In 1937, using a helium-oxygen mix, two Navy divers reached a simulated depth of 500 ft in one of the tanks at the Navy Experimental Diving Unit. These dry land experiments were put to operational use in May of 1939 when the U. S. submarine SQUALUS sank in 243 ft of water off the New England coast. Initial dives at the disaster scene were made with com- pressed air, but most of the 640 dives employed helium-oxygen mixtures. There was not a single death or serious injury suffered during this inten- sive deep-sea diving operation. The new technique was proved far superior to compressed air breathing. On the basis of data obtained during the SQUALUS dives the U. S. Navy established 380 ft as the new limit for operational diving with the time limit of 30 minutes on bottom. Without complications, a dive of this depth and duration requires more than three hours decompression, an unfavorable ratio of working time to decompres- sion time of 1 to 6. This unfavorable ratio of bottom time to decompression time has been overcome with a technique known as “saturation diving.” In saturation diving the diver is provided a fixed capsule on the sea floor or a personnel transfer capsule which transports him to the deck decompression chamber of a ship. The capsule is pressurized to the outside water pressure and pro- vided with a suitable breathing gas mixture. After about 24 hours of expo- sure under pressure, all tissues of the diver’s body have a gas saturation equivalent to the surrounding atmosphere, and the diver is considered to be “saturated.” Once he has been saturated, the diver’s requirements for decompression are based on depth rather than duration of the dive. A diver saturated to 300 ft requires the same decompression time (approxi- mately 2% days) whether his bottom time is one day or one month. After hours of useful work at depth, he returns to the safety and comfort of the underwater habitat or ship decompression chamber. Since there is no appreciable difference between the pressure of the habitat and that of the outside water, there is no requirement for decompression of a man entering the undersea chamber. Rather, decompression of the saturated diver for his total time spent at depth is accomplished in a single step when UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 69 he returns to the surface after days or weeks of useful work on the ocean bottom. The first experiments in the field of saturation diving were begun by the U.S. Navy in 1957, using a standard decompression chamber and then the climate-altitude chamber installed at the Naval Medical Research Laboratory in New London, Connecticut. These experiments were given the code name Genesis I, and the first phases were concerned with the re- actions of animals under pressure. After four years of experimental work it was shown that while test animals could not survive normal air at a pressure of seven atmospheres for more than 35 hours, they could tolerate an equivalent exposure to high pressure while breathing a synthetic gas. NON-NAVY EXPERIMENTS U.S. NAVY EXPERIMENTS GENESIS | (Simulated Saturated Dives) 1. Animals, 7 atmospheres, Proof of Link-National Geo. Society synthetic gas environment, Concept Feasibility One man, 200 ft depth, 2. Three men, sea level, helium/oxygen, 6 days, 1 day, Sept. 1962 late 1962 3. Three men, 100 ft simulated ; : depth, helium/oxygen, Physiological Eonsheltil 6 days, early 1963 Data diwoimen: 4. Three men, 200 ft simulated 33 ft depth, 3 7 depth, helium/oxygen, aye, 2 days, 1963 Sept. 1962 Me Conshelf 2 SSAA [ Five men, 36 ft depth, - . ene 30 days, and Un Men, Feasibility two men, 85 ft depth, 193 ft depth, Reinforcement GAG helium/oxygen, ¢ 11 days, J 1963 as July 1964 Physiological ‘ Data and Work Buds SEALAB II Proficiency Data Two men, aiaep f h " are ely y 205 ft depth, June 1964 helium/nitrogen/oxygen, 15 days, Aug. 1965 Conshelf 3 Four men, 328 ft depth, SEALAB III Ba Wee 40 men, Physiological ie 430 ft depth, Data, Work helium/oxygen, Proficiency 12 days, and Salvage scheduled for Spring 1968 Capability Major U. S. Navy and non-Navy experiments which helped lead the way to an advanced diving system 70 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Late in 1962, three men were exposed to a helium-oxygen breathing mixture at sea level pressure for six days. Although the breathing of the low density helium changed the timbre of the participants’ voices, creating what is known as “Donald Duck” effect, there were no other physiological or psychological changes noted in the subjects. In the next phase of Genesis I, conducted in early 1963, three Navy men lived for seven days in a two-section pressure chamber at the Experi- mental Diving Unit. One chamber was a dry living area with a helium- oxygen atmosphere. There was an adjacent wet room, partially filled with water, where the men periodically performed special energy-consuming work under pressure. The pressure in the connected chambers was similar to that encountered at 100 ft depths. The final phase of Genesis I was conducted at the Naval Medical Re- search Laboratory Test Chamber, with a medical officer and two enlisted men spending 12 days at a simulated ocean depth of 200 ft, again breath- ing a helium-oxygen gas mixture. As in all previous phases of Genesis I the experiments were completely successful. The Genesis I experiments under Captain George Bond, USN provided the sound physiological base for the present Sealab program. The Ameri- can inventor Edwin Link, and the French oceanographer Jacques Yves Cousteau have each produced significant work to advance saturated diving techniques. Their experiments, performed independently, were designated ““Man-in-the-Sea”’ and “Conshelf I” respectively. In the summer of 1964, the U. S. Navy conducted its first in situ experiment, designated Sealab I, near the Oceanographic Research Tower, Argus Island, off Bermuda. Participants lived in a 40 ft-long chamber at a depth of 193 ft for eleven days. During this time the Sealab I aquanauts lived a nearly autonomous existence, with minimum assistance required from the surface-support crew. An extensive program of physiological studies was successfully pursued, and the overall health of the aquanauts proved excellent throughout the project. During the Sealab II experiment, carried out in the fall of 1965 at La Jolla, California, three ten-man teams remained at a depth of 205 ft for 15 days each. This experiment too was an unqualified success. In addition to living underwater and conducting a multitude of physiological experi- ments, underwater work tasks in simulated salvage, oceanography, and construction were performed. In all, the three teams achieved more than 300 man-hours of useful work outside the habitat. ee UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 71 The Navy’s Sealab III habitat. Sealab III is the third phase of the open-ocean tests of the Man-in-the-Sea program. During the experiment, five teams of eight aquanauts, civilian scientists, and Navy divers will occupy the habitat for 12-day periods during the scheduled 60-day experiment. The habitat, a modification of the Sealab II capsule, is a nonpropelled, seagoing craft, with a living compartment, a diving locker, and an observation room. The habitat has a pressurized helium-oxygen atmosphere equal to the surrounding sea water pressure. Sealab III, the most ambitious saturated diving experiment to date, will be conducted during the summer of 1968 at the Navy range off San Clemente Island, California. In the Sealab III experiment five teams of eight Navy and civilian aquanauts will live successively in the sea floor habitat for 12-day periods. The habitat will initially be placed at a depth of 450 ft for use by two or three of the eight-man teams. The habitat will then be moved to a depth of 600 ft for the remainder of the experiment, with two or three teams living and working at the greater depth. The 40 aquanauts who participate in Sealab III will include Navy per- sonnel and civilian scientists and technicians from Navy facilities and other government and private agencies. Their biomedical experiments will in- clude extensive psychological testing, research in marine biology, sonic work, and evaluation of thermal protection. In conjunction with the last, 72 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM UPPER ACCESS LABORATORY AREA SLEEPING AREA DRY STORAGE AREA WATER HEATER VIEWPORT GRABROD CAMERA SUPPORT INSULATION a Baar wera CONCRETE DECK Koi Te o_o a Si ay — eee ae H l H Lj e = — OBSERVATION t AST. 2} ROOM wee ara : geen ENTRANCE ACCESS AREA INSULATION SWIMMING EQUIPMENT STORAGE VIEWPORT Sealab III interior arrangement the aquanauts will wear two types of garments to protect them from the cold, one a resistance-wire suit which resembles a form-fitting electric blanket (an improved version of the suit tried in Sealab II), and the other a tube suit which circulates warm water over the aquanaut’s body. Both suits will be powered by electricity from an umbilical linking the diver to the habitat. However, a prototype isotope heating device worn by the aquanaut will also be tested. The breathing gear worn by the aquanauts will consist of the improved Mark VII equipment, which can use gas car- ried in tanks by the aquanaut or pumped through the umbilical from the habitat. The Sealab III habitat will be essentially the same as used in Sealab II, with certain modifications. Most significant is the addition of two rooms, each 8 ft by 12 ft, to the bottom of the habitat. The after room is a div- ing station and the forward one an observation and storage compartment. The main habitat is divided into a laboratory, galley, and bunkroom. The additional rooms will provide more living and working space in the habitat and remove the awkward work of putting on and removing scuba gear from the main compartments. Sealab III will be logistically supported by the surface ship ELK RIVER, especially configured to perform this type mission. ELK RIVER will be fitted with two Deck Decompression Chambers and two Personnel Transfer Capsules. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 73 The Sealab experiments, with related studies and development efforts, have the purpose of providing the Navy with the technology and equip- ment to enable aquanauts to perform military and other national interest missions. However, the saturation diving technique is not considered the most effective method of working underwater for all missions, but rather for those of extended duration. This capability for extended ocean- bottom operations will enable Navy aquanauts to perform underwater sal- vage, construction, search, survey, maintenance, and research tasks here- tofore considered impossible for divers. The demand or open-circuit scuba is a militarized version of the commercial model. The unit is nonmagnetic, rugged, and capable of supporting hard-working swimmers to a depth of 130 ft. 74 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Back view of the Mark VI semiclosed- circuit mixed-gas scuba. Utilizing special breathing fixtures, this apparatus permits the diver more time at greater depths than the standard scuba rig. Diver with Mark VI semiclosed- circuit mixed-gas scuba. The Mark VI is a recirculating scuba using mixtures of nitrogen-oxygen or helium-oxygen. Exhaled gas is forced through a CO, removal canister and reused. Excess gas is bled off through a relief valve. This apparatus permits the diver more time at depth than the scuba equipment commonly used by civilian skin divers. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 75 DEEP SUBMERGENCE BIOMEDICAL DEVELOPMENT The Navy program, Deep Submergence BioMedical Development will direct and coordinate tasks directed toward the solution of problems in- herent in or associated with diving and working at deep salvage operational depths, diving and working in deeply submerged high pressure free swimmer habitats, operating small sea-level atmosphere deep diving vehicles and isolated fixed installations, and combat swimmer operations. Specific areas include personnel casualty treatment, biomedical aspects of life support and medical aspects of crew selection and performance. Personnel casualty treatment, decompression and related medical tech- niques, procedures and equipment will be developed to provide an accept- able support capability for diving operations with a goal of about 1000 ft. Improved capability will be provided in the areas of: breathing gas mixture technology; computer aided decompression procedures; decompression sickness and air embolism prevention and treatment, and emergency medi- cal care in the underwater environment. Biomedical systems, subsystems and components integral to the pro- vision of life support, health maintenance and environmental control, at 1000 ft. underwater equivalent pressure for up to 30 days will be advanced through prototype development and laboratory evaluation phases. The objective is to improve capabilities in the areas of cardiopulmonary physio- logical monitoring techniques; body temperature control techniques; nutri- tion and fluid balance maintenance; disease control and prevention; habitat temperature, humidity, gas composition, and a toxic contaminant environ- mental control system. Advances in medical selection techniques and procedures, human factors engineering, and crew performance assessment are vital to the effective utili- zation of manpower resources in the deep submergence environment. This phase of the work shall include the following: special aptitude assessment, psychiatric screening, and group composition determination; unique stress and related fatigue detection, measurement, prevention and control tech- niques; bio-electronic sensor aids for sight, smell, hearing, touch and equi- librium, and biomechanical locomotion aids and work tools; work-rest- sleep-cycle determination; environmental medical services related to living and work space design; pharmacological enhancement of crew performance. Medical care services in support of diving systems will be developed in- cluding the techniques, procedures, materials, equipment, therapeutic and anesthetic drugs, and biologicals for treatment of shock, respiratory and cardiac syncopy, and traumatic injury; general drug therapy; poison marine life injury prevention and treatment; disease and injury diagnosis and prog- nostication; emergency control and treatment of acute psychiatric cases. 287-778 O - 68 - 6 76 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM SEA FLOOR ENGINEERING The ability to design and construct facilities for the ocean bottom re- quires developments in sea floor engineering. Problems include site selec- tion and survey, structural analysis of fixed structures, fabrication and assembly of components, bearing capacity of bottom sediments, and the design and placement of anchors, and foundations on the ocean floor. The data on soil properties will be applied to the engineering design of foundations for underwater installations. Primary concern in foundation design and construction will be with safe bearing capacity based on toler- able settlement, rather than on the ultimate bearing capacity, which is the bearing stress necessary to rupture the soil mass beneath footing. Bottom soil properties are being studied to define their engineering characteristics. Sediment cores are taken from the bottom of the sea to determine the sig- nificant parameters of the soil which will affect the design of a sea floor installation. Core samples retrieved by the Navy Civil Engineering Labo- ratory from various depths in the ocean have indicated varying mechanical properties. Laboratory test data alone will not be sufficient to determine the ocean floor bearing capacity. Environmental investigations to determine soil properties are required, and methods to accomplish this are being developed. One device which will aid in determining the engineering properties of marine soils is the in situ plate bearing device. This device is capable of determining the short-term bearing pressure and settlement response of marine sediments as it operates on the sea floor while connected to a surface vessel only by a load-bearing line. Tests with this plate bearing de- vice have been performed on both cohesive and noncohesive soils in depths to 1200 ft. It was found that the size of the bearing plate was the most significant parameter affecting the bearing pressure and settlement re- sponse in both major sediment types. A second tool being developed for engineering investigations is the in situ vane-shear device. This device will be capable of performing vane- shear tests to a depth of 10 ft below the sea floor in a maximum depth of 6000 ft of water. Research will be performed (a) to obtain in place meas- urements of soil strength properties, (b) to relate in place data to labora- tory tests of cores taken from the test sites, and (c) to determine the rela- tionships between environmental vane-shear measurements and the more rapidly obtained core-penetrometer measurements for the various sedi- ment types. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY Vi NCEL in situ sea-floor plate bearing device after test in 1200 ft of water. The device is capable of determining the short-term bearing pressure and settlement re- sponse of marine scdiments. Soil tests are also being conducted in pressure vessels to determine the effects of a high-pressure, low-temperature environment on the engineer- ing properties of ocean bottom soils. The environmental effects were in- vestigated through consolidation, direct-shear, and vane-shear tests on four different ocean bottom sediments within pressure chambers at hydrostatic environmental pressures up to 10,000 psi. The pressure chambers were also refrigerated to provide a 1° to 3°C environmental temperature. Re- sults obtained have confirmed that soil properties vary with increased environmental pressure. Concrete foundations have been constructed in shallow water for many years for bridges and dams. Two methods of placing concrete have been used in the past. One method is by pumping concrete into forms which have been placed on the ocean bottom. The second is by the assembly of precast concrete units on the bottom. Both of these techniques will have to be studied for application to deep water. The placement and recovery of heavy loads in deep water pose prob- lems. The mechanics of raising and lowering heavy loads in the deep ocean require special precautions but are within the state of the art. 78 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The NCEL “Padlock” anchor being lowered into the water. This anchor is designed to support a load in any direction and will have a depth capability of 6000 ft. Deep ocean anchors will be of use in sea-floor construction for use as foundation anchor or as a mooring for construction equipment. In the design of deep ocean anchors certain constraints must be considered. These constraints are concerned with the type and degree of restraint, holding power, permanence, and simplicity of placement. As a solution to these constraints, an investigation was undertaken into the development of an anchor that could be rapidly and surely placed by free fall impetus and could be used to secure small to medium sized objects such as buoys, floats, and barges on station in deep ocean areas. A free fall anchor was tested unsuccessfully, and as a result it was concluded that means additional to, or independent of, free fall impetus would be neces- sary to achieve the depths of imbedment required to develop sufficient holding power. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 73 Another concept under consideration is that of the propellant- imbedment anchor. This anchor is a self-contained device similar to a large caliber gun consisting of a barrel, a recoil mechanism, and the projec- tile, which is the anchor. Experimental observation of these devices under test loading to depths of 6000 ft have demonstrated their potential for deep water application; however, the tests have also pointed out limita- tions in reliability and capacity. Currently a larger propellant-embedment anchor rated at 50,000 pounds capacity is being investigated. The anchor, developed by the U.S. Army Research and Development Laboratory for use in coastal waters, is being modified by the Navy for use at greater depths, with the target depth set for 6000 ft. To provide an anchor point in the sea floor that is totally fixed and will support an applied load from any direction, the propellant-imbedment- anchor concept was applied to an anchorage complex for bottom-mounted structures. The design as produced is a tripod frame with articulated bear- ing pads at the extremities and is referred to as the Padlock anchor. Propellant-actuated imbedment anchors are mounted in each of the three arms above the bearing pads. The anchors are driven into the sea floor through openings in the pads. The other end of the cable that is attached to the anchor is connected to a cable-rewind mechanism at the center. The rewind mechanism pretensions the anchor lines after the anchors are imbedded. The Padlock anchor has been demonstrated to be feasible and has func- tioned satisfactorily in shallow water. This anchor can be used as a foun- dation component when set down in a group of three or more. Three Padlock anchors can be joined by a framework and can support a large load of perhaps a few hundred tons. These methods for anchoring to the ocean floor can be roughly termed static, in that the anchors firmly attach themselves to the sea floor and from then on require no expenditure of energy to maintain their positions. In contrast to this method is the dynamic positioning method, which has been used successfully in positioning certain ships and barges. Dynamic positioning uses propellers located advantageously such as bow thrusters to position the ship precisely and to maintain this position on the open ocean. During recent years, the Navy has installed several permanent ship moors in depths as great as 6000 ft. From these moors has evolved a design tech- nique suitable for holding large ships in a relatively fixed position against wind, waves, and current. Six moors were designed and installed by the 80 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Navy. These moors, in chronological order, have been designated as: Hard- tack (1958), TOTO I (1959), Squaw (1959), TOTO II (1962), and Squaw (1965). The Hardtack installation, in water as deep as 6000 ft, consisted of a number of moors which held test ships for an underwater nuclear shot. This program provided the initial concept for permanent deep sea moor- ings. An experimental ship moor based on this concept was subsequently evaluated in the Tongue of the Ocean, from which it received the designa- tion TOTO I. The Squaw moors positioned a buoyant, but submerged, model submarine hull for sonar training exercises. The Artemis and TOTO II were specifically designed for positioning large ships in connection with other underwater programs. Although each of these moors is representative of a somewhat different design and installation problem, together they represent a logical sequence in development of the current mooring technique. These moors will pro- vide guidance for design and installation of future deep-sea ship moors. ACOUSTICAL OCEANOGRAPHY Since World War II, the Navy’s underwater detection capabilities have increased greatly. Increased knowledge of the effects of the ocean environ- ment on underwater sound propagation, due primarily to the acoustic inves- tigations of the Navy Ocean Science Program, has been an important factor in the advancement of long-range sonar and underwater weapon systems. In addition to the direct path commonly associated with a sonar beam, long-range sonars can take advantage of phenomena which exist under cer- tain conditions: 1. Surface ducts, shallow layers of warm water near the surface, which carry sound waves long distances, as they are unable to penetrate the colder water beneath. 2. Convergence zones, which occur at regular intervals as the sound is alternately refracted upward by penetrating colder water, and reflected downward from the surface. 3. Bottom bounce, in which mode the sound waves are bounced off the bottom at an angle of incidence which projects them farther through the water. Surface-duct transmission requires a strong, shallow thermocline, convergence zone transmission requires deep water with the depth of mini- mum sound velocity well clear of the bottom, and bottom bounce requires that the ocean bottom be relatively flat and hard. Hence, continuous UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 81 Se SURFACE DUCT BOTTOM BOUNCE CONVERGENCE DIRECT PATH ZONE Propagation of sound energy through an ocean environment is a complex process and one that is not fully understood. The Navy acoustical oceanography effort con- tinues to gain working knowledge of the effect of the ocean environment on under- water sound propagation. developments are undertaken not only to improve the equipments them- selves but also to measure the environmental characteristics of the world’s oceans so the operators may select the appropriate mode of operation. On June 30, 1966, Projects Artemis and Trident were combined, and the research and development program and the existing facilities (the Tudor Hill Laboratory, Bermuda, Argus Island, and the USNS MISSION CAPIS- TRANO) were transferred into an acoustic surveys project. The Navy is conducting research and ocean engineering leading toward the development of equipment and systems to meet specific requirements for ASW surveil- lance. The current program emphasizes research and at-sea experimentation to resolve acoustic, environmental, and engineering uncertainties prior to the development of subsystems and/or systems. In general, investigations are being pursued in the areas of wave-front behavior, target characteristics, ambient noise, propagation, reverberation, signal processing, design of un- derseas structures and components, and undersea power transmission tech- niques. Typical oceanographic efforts carried out under the project are acoustic surveys, in areas of interest to determine bottom roughness, depth, and composition, surface temperature throughout the year, sound velocity pro- files in the immediate area and as a function of season, ambient noise direc- tivity, spectrum, coherence, energy levels and statistics, reverberant reflec- tors and scatterers, and the energy level and coherence of their returns. 82 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Bottom-reflection processes are being studied by means of theoretical models to determine the influences of composition, layering, roughness and acoustic frequency on reflection losses. Experimental measurements are being made at sea to provide accurate data and new techniques for measuring bottom roughness, reverberation, and reflectivity, and to deter- mine relationships between these properties. In addition to these major advanced development programs, various sup- porting programs are leading to innovations in underwater acoustics. Im- proved acoustic data collection and analysis techniques are being developed. Airborne acoustic survey methods are under evaluation for the rapid col- lection of acoustic propagation and reverberation data. Various acoustic data collection techniques have been developed for deep and shallow water, and, more recently, acoustic transmission measurements are being made from deep research vehicles. Measurements of the acoustic and other properties of the ocean are being made to investigate environmentally induced amplitude fluctuations of acoustic signals as a function of range and frequency. Physical properties are measured by means of buoyed current and thermistor arrays. The lat- eral variability of acoustic and sediment properties is being investigated in a variety of physiographic provinces using seismic reflection methods and deep research vehicles. Considerable work is underway in the acoustics programs to investigate biological scattering. Experiments are being conducted to determine the abundance and distribution of the organisms populating the deep scattering layers and to determine their effect on sound propagation. These experi- ments are revealing that biological scattering is dependent on season, time of day, acoustic frequency, and geographic location. Accomplishments in the exploratory development area include: 1. The derivation of a mathematical model which explains the nature of the acoustic field and the propagation loss in subsurface ducts (this model is known as the Normal Mode Theory). 2. The development of techniques for performing real-time shipboard analysis of the propagation and echo-ranging data. 3. Development of programs for computing propagation loss by ray or wave theory. 4. Experiments to measure bottom-reflection loss, reverberation levels, ambient noise levels and characteristics, submarine target strength, sound velocity profiles, etc. UNDERSEA TECHNOLOGY 83 Continuing experiments will reveal more about the complex nature of target strengths of submarines, leading to the ability to synthesize a com- plex target into more simple ones. Distortion in the waveform of various types of acoustic signals is being investigated, as is the relationship between signal phase stability and environmental parameters. The results of these experiments are being correlated with data acquired by the Marine Geophysical Surveys program. Begun in 1965 by the Naval Oceanographic Office, the goal is to make a comprehensive study of about 15 percent of the ocean floor and determine its effect on sound propaga- tion. Measurements are being made of both acoustic and physical prop- erties of the ocean bottom. Measurements in various environments are being made to determine effects of oceanographic conditions on range and bearing accuracy of long- range sources, with a view to improving the accuracy of fire-control solu- tions in long-range antisubmarine weapon systems. DEVELOPMENTS IN ENVIRONMENTAL PREDICTION AND OCEANOGRAPHIC SURVEY The Assistant Oceanographer for Ocean Engineering and Development directs the developmental program in environmental prediction and ocean- ographic survey. Upon completion of the development effort these systems are integrated into the programs of the Assistant Oceanographer for Oceanographic Operations. PREDICTION OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT (ASWEPS) In order that the operating forces may effectively plan and execute naval operations, availability of predictions of environmental parameters is extremely important. The Antisubmarine Warfare Environmental Pre- diction Services (ASWEPS) program consists of: (a) development of in- strumentation for use aboard ships, aircraft, and buoys to measure oceano- graphic parameters, (b) development of thermal-structure analyses, predic- tion techniques, and displays, and (c) application of the products to ASW planning and tactical operations. The forecasted oceanographic data pro- vided to ships at sea by Navy fleet broadcast and facsimile can be directly converted to tactical indexes, such as expected range capability of a par- ticular sonar. The earliest effort of the Navy in the area of oceanographic prediction was in the prediction of sea ice conditions. To minimize the considerable damage being sustained by ships operating in arctic waters, the Naval Oceanographic Office in 1952 and 1953 instituted an experimental ice observation and prediction program. Today, synoptic ice observations are acquired by ice-reconnaissance aircraft throughout much of the Arctic, and selected Antarctic areas. Sea ice reports are also received from ships and helicopters, and satellite pictures are used experimentally for gross features such as boundaries of ice masses and open water. Analysis of observations by ice forecasters enables them to furnish synoptic ice predictions covering large areas, enabling ships and submarines to select appropriate areas and 84 PREDICTION AND SURVEY 85 BRIDLE-YOKE ASSEMBLY GIMBAL HOUSING -———|_— “AY GIMBAL ——1,000'- SENSING-STRAIN CABLE 24 THERMISTORS 3 PRESSURE TRANSDUCERS DOUBLE ARMOR CABLE ——THERMISTOR SENSOR CAGE j. THERMISTOR PRESSURE TRANSDUCER SENSOR CAGE / By by — WATER A PASSAGE SLIT if fNEOrRENE PIGTAIL / NEOPRENE MOLD J-M@&M CONNECTOR / (-THERMISTOR / 7/8 SHACKLE 9-TUCK SPLICE Peay ae eet 4-— SWIVEL END TERMINATION 5——4th CLASS SWIVEL CLOSED BRONZE THIMBLE EYE -—31/2" CIRC. CABLE LAID NYLON 39,000 LB TEST UNIT LENGTH OF 1,800 FT. J-— SHACKLE-SWIVEL-SHACKLE JOINT GLASS FLOATATION SPHERES / I LBS STATIC BUOYANCY +— UNIT LENGTH (1,800) NYLON 12,000 RS.1. 2" DIAMETER ENCASED IN NYLON Zo FISHNET O.R.E. ACOUSTICAL RELEASE (10,000 LBS.) y SHACKLE-SWIVEL-SHACKLE JOINT R LINE |‘ LE 100° NYLON RISE 1,260 LB. Oe ae =” 10,000 LB. MECHANICAL WEAK-LINK ae 90! 3/4" CHAIN ~~180' 11/8" CHAIN a 2,226 LB MUSHROOM ANCHOR ASWEPS deep moored telemetering oceanographic/meteorological buoy tracks. In addition to reducing ship damage, ice prediction has reduced the time required for completion of naval operations in these remote areas. New ice forecasting methods and increased knowledge of ice formation, behavior, and deterioration will, as a result of more data from satellites and other more conventional sources, further benefit polar and under-ice operations. The early success of the synoptic approach to ice observation and fore- casting led to exploration of other facets of oceanographic forecasting. 86 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM In 1954, the first synoptic wave charts, showing wave height contours for the entire North Atlantic, were constructed from the ocean wave reports which had, for some years, been submitted in six-hourly synoptic weather reports by commercial and naval vessels. By 1956, radio-fascimile synoptic and prognostic wave charts were being regularly transmitted to the Fleet. The Optimum Ship Routing Program, developed in 1955-1956, uses wave predictions in routing ships along tracks of maximum operational effi- ciency. Using wave heights, ocean current, and surface wind predictions, the Navy today routes between 1200 and 1400 ships annually in the North Atlantic and North Pacific. The 14 to 16 hours saved by following the recommended trans-Atlantic route can save the owners of a vessel 2000 to 5000 dollars per crossing in operating costs. This service will be improved by recent developments in predicting wave heights, wave periods, and ocean currents. Sea surface temperature and layer depth analyses of the western North Atlantic began in 1957. It was realized that analysis and prediction of the thermal structure would be of value to ASW planners and tacticians, since temporal and spatial changes in the ocean environment greatly affect sonar capabilities. Enthusiastic reception by the ASW forces of these first efforts contributed to the establishment, in 1959, of the formal ASWEPS pro- gram. ASWEPS environmental and operational forecasts now available for the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and Mediterranean give ASW commands an indication of areas favorable for operations and an opportunity to em- ploy optimum disposition of forces. The shore-based network, which pro- vides evaluated daily and long-range information, is supplemented by tactical on-scene networks directed by ASWEPS teams embarked in flag- ships of ASW carrier division commanders. The value of predictions is dependent upon the amount and quality of synoptic environmental data available to the forecasters and analysts. An increase in the ocean areas covered, as well as an increase in the quality of predictions, has led to a development of instrumentation to provide raw data. The concept of system engineering is followed in instrument design; that is, integration with existing equipment on various platforms when- ever possible, with the data recorded in digital format and transmitted automatically to users. New instrumentation developments include: 1. Salinity-temperature depth system, which records the salinity and water temperature at various increments of depth 2. Expendable salinity-temperature depth system, which need not be recovered after making its measurements PREDICTION AND SURVEY 87 3. Integrated shipboard expendable bathythermograph display system, which provides instant, automatic retransmission of digital temperature versus depth profiles to stations remote from the ship, as well as providing on-site reading for immediate tactical use 4. Automated shipboard forecasting system for use under the super- vision of mobile ASWEPS teams aboard major Task Group flagships 5. Near surface reference temperature device, which provides a measure of water temperature immediately below the surface 6. Airborne radiation thermometer, including digitization of the data output which, measuring the sea surface temperature as a function of in- frared radiation, enables an aircraft to amass data over a large area over a short time 7. Airborne wave height recorder, essentially an accurate radar al- timeter to measure sea states 8. Buoy temperature sensor cables 9. Expendable bathythermographs for surface and airborne platforms. The Deep Airborne Expendable Bathythermograph (DAXBT), with a digitized output, isa follow-on to the AN/SQS-36 expendable bathyther- mograph, and will increase measurements of temperature versus depth from 1500 to 5000 ft depth. The Shipboard Expendable Bathythermograph (SXBT) is currently replacing the mechanical BT which has been in use by surface ships, essentially unchanged, since 1939, and is to be modified to be adaptable to installation in helicopters, and the Helicopter Expendable Bathythermograph (HXBT), also to be provided with automatic digital readout. Through automatic data links, the flagship ASWEPS team will have at its disposal a complete profile of temperature-depth parameters in the area of interest. Developments in the prediction of the marine environment are being carried out by other Navy offices as well. Naval Air Systems Command, in the interest of improving airborne ASW capabilities, actively coordinates with the Oceanographer of the Navy in this field, and in developing tech- niques for the rapid, accurate prediction of ranges to be obtained from air- borne sonar systems. The feasibility of developing an expendable device to measure propagation loss is being investigated. To increase the synoptic data which are essential to the effectiveness of ASWEPS, a “Ships of Opportunity” program employs merchant vessels not primarily engaged in oceanographic research and survey operations. These vessels provide data in areas not covered in the normal course of naval operations, as an adjunct to the system, and in the process of their 88 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM A radiation thermometer mounted on the wing of a S2E aircraft permits measurement of the sea-surface temperature over a large area in a short time period. normal transit from port to port. Among the equipments being developed for placement on these ships is a self-contained sensing and recording package which can be conveniently shipped to any location in the world and hand-carried aboard a designated ship of opportunity. The system will be capable of measuring conductivity and temperature at increments of depth to 1200 ft, and of storing these data for 60 or more observations. The system, known as the Suitcase CTD system, will have a weight such that one man can easily carry it, and a design such that it can be operated by untrained personnel. Upon completion of a CTD survey operation, the entire package will be shipped back to the Naval Oceanographic Office, where the stored data will be converted to magnetic tape for computer data processing. Other plans for the ships-of-opportunity program include development of expendable instruments, meteorological instruments, and a van housing an integrated central control station for all measurements taken on a survey. Quantitative information on the effectiveness of ASWEPS, and guidance for its future direction, will be gleaned from the results of an 18-month PREDICTION AND SURVEY 89 Fleet Operational Investigation (FOI), being conducted by COMASWFOR- LANT. Progress reports of the FOI, and a recently completed operational research study of ASWEPS, demonstrate that the program provides signif- icant increases in the effectiveness of ASW tactics such as barriers, convoy escort and screening, and air-sea coordinated searches. Techniques and procedures developed in ASWEPS are being extended to further applications, particularly in ASW in a shallow water environ- ment, and to a study of marine life to develop a false target prediction ca- pability. ASW tactical doctrines are being reviewed to accommodate con- siderations of support provided by environmental prediction. Although ASWEPS products are now used effectively by the operating forces, room for improvement exists. Additional synoptic environmental data can and should be provided daily to improve analysis and prediction accuracy. Planned instrumentation for ships, aircraft, and buoys will greatly enhance the quality and quantity of synoptic oceanographic ob- servations in the next few years. Development of new and revised fore- casting models will be accelerated by increased use of computer techniques and automatic data processing as more synoptic data becomes available. Although designed for ASW support, ASWEPS has been a source of ancillary benefits. The Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, for example, is making profitable use of ASWEPS predictions in selecting areas of maxi- mum horizontal sea surface temperature; four-fold increases of catch have been reported as a result of consulting environmental charts. SHIPBOARD SURVEY SYSTEM An integrated shipboard data-collecting and recording system, the Ship- board Survey System, is a most significant development in ocean survey- ing. Prior to the early 1960s, oceanographic surveying, was performed by instrumentation which was largely an accumulation of items, evolving largely from projects supported in the Ocean Science Program. In 1962, Navy de- velopment funds were provided to initiate a program for modem, sophis- ticated instrumentation to complement and accelerate the effort of the Navy’s TENOC plan, first outlined in 1961 as a ten-year program in oceanography. The USNS SILAS BENT, the Navy’s first ship built for this purpose, has been joined by a second new oceanographic survey ship, USNS ELISHA KANE. With this system, measurements of sound velocity, temperature, depth, salinity, ambient light, magnetics, 90 PRESENT CAPABILITIES SALINITY, SCUND VELOCITY DEPTH AMBIENT LIGHT UNOERWAYT NARROW SEAM BATHYMETRY WIDE BEAM BATHYMETRY SEISMIC PROFILING TOTAL MAGNETIC INTENSITY THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM PLANNED CAPABILITIES UNDERWAY SGUND VELOCITY PROFILES AND SUB-SOTTOM PROFILES: INCBEASED COMPUTER MEMORY ON-STATION WATER SAMPLER SATELLITE NAVIGATION INERTIAL NSVIGATION WATER CLARITY MEASUREMENT GRAVITY. ee SHIPBOARD LOW FREQUENCY SATSYMETAY ABRAY SONAR SEA SURFACE TEMPESATURE NAVIGATION LORAN G VLE COURSE SPEED The Shipboard Survey System permits recording of measured data both on-station and underway in a form that is easily adapted to modern high-speed computer processing. gravity, surface temperature, and bottom and sub-bottom profiles are re- corded in a form easily adapted to modern high-speed data processing. Data are gathered by the on-station instrument package, referred to as a fish, which is capable of operating to depths of 6100 meters. As the fish is low- ered into the water at arate of up to two meters per second, a profile of the characteristics of the ocean is made by the sensors in the fish. A remote readout device for displaying essential data, also part of the system, is mounted on the bridge of the ship. A total of eleven such vessels, equipped with the shipboard survey system, are planned. AIR-SEA INTERFACE Scientists have inferred striking analogies between physical phenomena in the ocean depths and those in the earth’s atmosphere; both are fluid masses acted upon by pressures, currents, insolation, rotation of the earth, and other internal and external forces. The boundary layer between these PREDICTION AND SURVEY 91 somewhat similar, but extremely different, environments—the air-sea inter- face—is the subject of extensive investigation. The Navy is studying me- teorological prediction methods and ocean-atmosphere conditions affect- ing missile launch restrictions, aircraft and ship route forecasting, hurricane prediction, polar weather techniques, and radio/radar propagations over water. Hardware developments are being made incident to sensing, record- ing, and telemetering observations of atmospheric and related oceanic parameters. This increased knowledge of the interactions between sea and atmosphere will be of benefit to mariners everywhere. MAGNETICS AND GRAVITY Two general areas of great interest to the Navy, in such applications as undersea navigation and ocean surveillance, are the earth’s gravity and mag- netic field. Developments are directed toward techniques that improve the measurement, analysis, and display of the earth’s magnetic field. The accuracy of the spherical harmonic surface at sea level has been verified from the data incorporated in the 1965 World Variation Charts. Spatial coherence of short-period variations in the magnetic field is being tested by simultaneous records made at two or more stations. Finally, a geological interpretation of the total magnetic field data of the U.S. East Coast Sur- vey is underway in cooperation with the U.S. Geological Survey. In response to Department of Defense requirements, The Navy is de- veloping improved methods for measuring, analyzing, and utilizing the earth’s magnetic field. Among its objectives are to utilize magnetic field characteristics to position aircraft, ships, and submarines, and to analyze magnetic anomaly effects on bombing and navigation devices. Future plans include preparation of detailed magnetic variation charts, which will assist navigators everywhere, both surface and aircraft. The present Project Magnet airborne survey system will eventually be expanded to an air- borne geophysical survey system capable of providing precise, accurately positioned magnetic measurements in any area of the world. The Navy has been assigned management control of the Department of Defense project for development of a helicopter gravity-collection system. Test equipment has been selected, and the test, plans for which are well underway, will be carried out jointly by the Army, Air Force, and Navy. In response to this task, the Naval Oceanographic Office has plans for a 287-778 O- 68-7 22 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM program to increase speed, accuracy, and efficiency of gravity data collec- tion. A helicopter gravity equipment configuration is to be developed which will permit rapid response to requirements for gravity data on a worldwide basis. It is anticipated that the program will eventually de- velop methods to perform direct measurement of the deflection of the vertical from a moving platform, and to perform gravity data analysis in response to Department of Defense requirements in areas such as naviga- tion, positioning, guidance, and control. RADIOLOGICAL SURVEYS The distribution of certain artificial radioisotopes, resulting from nuclear events, deposited on the sea surface as fallout has been under investigation since early 1965. Developments are also in progress to measure the miner- alogical properties of matter in the sea and bottom sediments and the dis- tribution of radioisotopes in the marine biosphere. As part of the overall program of chemical and radiochemical investiga- tions, the Navy under a cooperative agreement with the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, acts as a consultant and tests and evaluates systems utilizing radioisotopes, in the marine environment. Those systems which are presently under study are the Deep Water Isotopic Current Analyzer (DWICA IT) Nuclear Sediment Denisty Probe and an in situ oxygen analyzer. COASTAL ENGINEERING Riverine warfare, amphibious operations, and mine warfare are examples of naval operations requiring a definitive understanding of coastal oceano- graphic and hydrographic conditions. Developments are underway which will provide a greater understanding of the dynamic processes, morphology, composition of coastal and riverine bottoms, and other factors affecting mining, mine-hunting, etc., in shallow water and riverine areas. Preliminary work includes testing a nuclear sediment-density meter in both shallow and abyssal environments and performing stress-controlled laboratory con- solidation experiments. Tests involving the nuclear sediment-density meter indicate that nuclear devices for environmental measurement of certain mass properties show considerable promise for both analytical and correla- tion purposes. Consolidation tests to determine the stress history of a PREDICTION AND SURVEY 93 particular sediment regime are presently being performed in the laboratory on sediment samples from various riverine and oceanic environments. Techniques are being developed for inferring from oceanographic con- ditions in surveyable areas those parameters affecting mines and mining; search and detection; swimmer activity; and amphibious and other naval operations in shallow water areas, including straits, river mouths, estuaries, and open coasts. A program is being undertaken to develop, test, and evaluate advanced riverine survey techniques and oceanographic/hydrologic data analysis methods to provide predictions on tides, currents, and water levels in sup- port of naval operations in Southeast Asia. This development, testing and evaluation effort is carried on in South Vietnam as part of the River Survey Team effort. This team is composed of Marine Corps surveyors and Naval Oceanographic Office civilian specialists who operate in direct support to Commander, Naval Forces Vietnam for the purpose of providing necessary oceanographic, hydrologic and charting information for the rivers of South Vietnam. Better equipment and techniques to improve data-collection capability and the quality of the data collected will lead to production of more ac- curate combat charts. Plans exist for development of prototype sensors and equipment which can be utilized in the development of automated hydrographic survey systems, and in which advanced techniques and equip- ments will be employed for precise positioning in data acquisition. As the rapidity with which data acquisition can be accomplished in- creases, techniques will enable accurate surveys to be made of recreational areas, such as small boat marinas, which will increase the safety and equip- ment of this rapidly growing activity. HYDROGRAPHIC SURVEYING AND CHARTING (HYSURCH) Development of a Hydrographic Surveying and Charting (HYSURCH) system has been initiated to support fleet needs for rapid production of hydrographic data in coastal areas during amphibious and mine warfare op- erations. Design of the HYSURCH system will be based on a shipboard command/control concept for rapid hydrographic and topographic (coastal) data acquisition, correlation, compilation, reproduction, and dissemina- tion. It is anticipated that the HYSURCH system will be composed of an aerial survey subsystem, a hydrographic survey subsystem, and a shipboard cartographic compilation and reproduction subsystem. The prototype 94 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM HYSURCH system will provide a hydrographic survey unit with the capa- bility for ready acquisition and display of sounding data. A contoured hydrographic chart will be available for distribution to the fleet within one week after such data acquisition. AERIAL SURVEY TECHNIQUES A comprehensive project for water depth determination and recording of ocean bottom detail by employing aerial color photography as a remote sensor has been continued. Aerial color photography was obtained over a test range established in the Key West, Florida, area in March 1967. These films showed bottom detail to a depth of 65 ft. The accuracy with which water depths can be measured by photogrammetric techniques will be determined. Preliminary results indicate that blue light is a deterrent to sharp image formation and good contrast in water penetration photog- raphy. Future studies will use narrow band filters to eliminate the blue light and obtain photography with only green and red light. Development of a new color emulsion that has no blue-sensitive layer may provide a means for greater water penetration with aerial photography. Tests with the narrow-band filters and such a new color emulsion will determine the spectral quality of light that will yield considerable detail at deeper depths than was formerly possible. AUTOMATION OF CHART PRODUCTION The demand for charts and special products of all kinds has increased steadily in recent years as a direct result of the rapid increase in numbers of ships and aircraft and in their performance capabilities. The solution to production problems was found in the employment of high-speed com- puters, not only for computational purposes, but also for preparation of input data into automated cartographic production systems. The initial steps to automate cartographic production were taken in 1960, when development was begun on a precision automatic digital co- ordinatograph system. The first such system was placed in operation in the Naval Oceanographic Office in June 1963. The system is capable of drawing, scribing (engraving), or photographically exposing continuous straight or curved lines; printing numerical data with a mechanical print head; and photographically exposing alphanumeric data on large sheets of sensitized film. A director unit processes the information supplied to it PREDICTION AND SURVEY 95 and controls the coordinatograph and the operations of its interchange- able instrument heads. The plotter operates on the principle that any curved line that can be described by a mathematical equation can be automatically produced by the system. The final output of the automatic plotter system consists of inked plastic or paper sheets, a photographic film, or a scribed negative. The de- tail on these outputs is plotted and delineated at a speed and to a tolerance that cannot be matched by manual methods. Considerable progress has been made in developing a library of computer programs to construct different types of cartographic functions. Com- puter programs already developed and in use on the digital coordinato- graph are: 1. Construction of electronic navigational position lattice systems, both hyperbolic (loran, etc.) and circular (shoran, etc.) for charts and oceano- graphic/hydrographic survey plotting sheets. 2. Construction of over 30 different map projections. 3. Annotation and plotting of soundings resulting from hydrographic surveys, automatically plotting the soundings in their proper latitude and longitude position and annotating the correct depth in fathoms and feet. 4. Plotting and scribing of geographic shoreline and other map features. 5. Delineating the major great-circle sailing routes and underwater cable routes of the world. 6. Production of magnetic variation and declination charts of the world. 7. Scribing of various metric plotting grids and military reference grids for overprinting on nautical charts. Numerous requests for automatic services have been filled from other government agencies, private institutions, and foreign governments. In addition to providing production assistance, technical information, guid- ance, and computer program documentations have been supplied freely to help others develop similar capabilities. By using unique computer programming techniques, an automated cartographic system can produce in eight hours as many as twelve chart originals, completely plotted, scribed, and ready for photolithographic production. Stops are required only for changes in scribing materials and magnetic tapes. In the four years the plotter has been in operation, over 7000 individual original drawings and color separation originals have been produced. Automatic cartographic production systems will be added in 1967 to provide more advanced capabilities, automatically placing names and 96 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM symbols in any desired position and using various type sizes and styles. Among the components of these systems are digitizers which will provide the capability of storing cartographic source data in such a manner that it can readily be retrieved from a library file, processed by a computer, and graphically produced on the coordinatograph within a matter of minutes or hours. Future plans will provide a color separation capability, whereby each color plate of a printed chart can be digitized and recorded separately, and stored for chart compilation or revision use. Cartographic automation at the Naval Oceanographic Office will play an ever increasingrole in supplying the fleet and the oceanographic com- munity with accurate and up-to-date charts. The high-speed production capabilities of automated systems will make it possible to supply needed charts more quickly and economically than ever before. OCEAN ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES To carry out development programs in ocean engineering, the Navy is particularly dependent on certain laboratories* and activities with special engineering and test facilities? No attempt will be made in this report to describe either the Navy laboratories or all the facilities that the Navy owns. Each facility addressed in this section is unique. It may be the larg- est Government facility of its kind in the nation, or it may be the only facility of this size and scope. Navy laboratories and activities with mis- sions related to ocean engineering perform research, development, test, and evaluation in broad areas of technology. For example, the programs ad- dressed in this report are performed directly by these laboratories and activities or indirectly through them by universities and industrial firms. OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTRUMENTATION CENTER Since its formation in 1963, the Oceanographic Instrumentation Center, Washington D. C. has been engaged in solving instrumentation problems of importance to Navy laboratories and to other government, academic, and industrial laboratories. The Center carries out three major functions: testing, development, and field services. The testing program is designed to determine performance of oceano- graphic instruments and related devices. New facilities which allow for the laboratory simulation of the ocean environment have been acquired. Typical of these facilities are large water baths in which temperature and pressure may be varied in a manner similar to the deep ocean. Salinity chambers and salt spray baths test the effect of the saline quality of ocean water on instruments and equipment. A flume which simulates ocean water flow from 0.01 to 5.00 knots is a recent acquisition. The infor- mation gathered from this test program is available to all government, *Navy laboratories and activities and their addresses are listed in Appendix A. +Facilities in this context refers to particular pieces of hardware or equipment. M7) 98 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Environmental chamber used for simulating various temperature and humidity conditions. The chamber size is 17% in. high, 19% in. wide, 18 in. deep. The con- trolled temperature range is -30°F to 250°F, with a regulation of £2°F. Relative humidity can be controlled in the range of 20 to 95 percent. academic, and industrial laboratories. This information has made a signif- icant contribution to the development of such devices as the expendable bathythermograph, self-contained current meters, precision graphic re- corders, and a number of other oceanographic devices. In addition, a great wealth of information has been assembled and distributed regarding the performance of off-the-shelf oceanographic instruments. This information is distributed through the Instrument Fact Sheets which are sent to over 2000 users in government, industry, and institutes. There is continuing, unanimous, and enthusiastic comment from users about the importance of and the need to expand this program. The development program has for the most part been directed toward systems engineering the data collection process on oceanographic survey ships and related platforms, such as the shipboard survey systems that are installed on the USNS SILAS BENT and the ELISHA KANE. Other de- velopment programs which the Center has undertaken are the design and ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 99 Tensile-compression tester used to test the strength of oceanographic cables, floats, and associated equipment fabrication of an optical reader and converter for ocean current data re- corded on film; the adaptation and evaluation of the NASA-developed In- terrogation, Recording, and Location System (IRLS) as an oceanographic measurement system; devices to prevent loss of overside instruments; and suitcase-sized, simplified instrument systems for use aboard ships of opportunity. The field services function is devoted to installing and maintaining a thirty million dollar inventory of oceanographic survey instruments and related equipment for ships under the technical direction of the Com- mander, Naval Oceanographic Office. The Center operates a service to calibrate reversing thermometers. Thermometers are calibrated on a reim- bursable basis for government and civilian activities in the United States as well as for laboratories of other nations. Cooperative programs have been conducted with other U. S. laboratories and with the British National In- stitute of Oceanography. The Oceanographic Instrumentation Center is the Navy’s focal point regarding the availability and performance of a wide variety of oceano- graphic instruments and related equipment. The Navy has proposed that 100 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM this center become a national center for oceanographic instrumentation. These instruments produce one of the essentials of oceanography: precise, reliable data. OCEAN PRESSURE LABORATORY The Navy Ships Research and Development Center, Annapolis Division, Annapolis, Maryland, is in the process of installing the largest and most complete deep-ocean pressure testing complex in the world. This ocean pressure laboratory for research and engineering creates in the laboratory the pressure, temperature, and salinity environment encountered in the depths of the ocean. The pressure laboratory consists basically of three horizontal pressure chambers. It is unique in the combination of pressure- chamber sizes and high-pressure capability. The largest of the three vessels involved forging parts unequaled in size and complexity. The chamber will weigh 750 tons, and its internal diameter will be 10 ft and overall length Partial List of Navy-Owned Pressure Test Facilities Static Static : 5 O ti Peeeenlival Inside Inside Name of Facility erating bee oUMe, Length | Diameter Notes Pressure | Pressure| (ft?) (ft) (ft) (psi Si p DI (psig) NSRDC 1000 1250 7590 | 40 14 T62 penetrations adaptable for either Annadiv electrical or mechanical use BLDG 177 —Il NSRDC 12,000 15,000 1990 | 22 10 7 highly versatile penetrations for Annadiv both electrical and mechanical use 3D-A c plus 2 hydraulic penetrations NSRDC 5000 7500 103 | 21 2.5 10 electrical penetrations Annadiv Bldg. 11 (3) | NASL 3000 4500 295 8 6 7 electrical penetrations 8 viewports, 2 in. dia. NSRDC 15,000 | 22,500 284 | 19.7 4 Temp. cycling 0° -90°F Cardiv 7 electrical penetrations NSRDC 10,000 15,000 673 | 11.17 10 14 electrical penetrations Cardiv 10 ft Tank + = NSRDC 6000 9000 673 | 20 6 Temp. cycling 0° - 100° F Cardiv 7 electrical penetrations 6 ft Tank NCEL 5500 8250 360 | 10 6 6 electrical penetrations 1 viewport, 4 in. dia. “= APL 16,000 24,000 266 | 15.5 5 2 electrical penetrations Penn State Univ. #1 | Portsmouth 578 750 | 46,000 | 45 30 175 electrical penetrations Naval Shipyard t USN Submarine Medical Center 135 140 1120 8.96 9 3 electrical penetrations Groton, Conn. 4 viewpoints, 12 in. dia. Pressure-Altitude Chamber | ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 101 Model of the deep-ocean pressure laboratory under construction at Navy Marine Engineering Laboratory. It will have facilities for testing machinery systems and equipment up to 10 ft in diameter and 17 ft long at pressures corresponding to 30,000 ft ocean depth. Looe fh € ‘ f STATIC PUMP 4 FT. TEST TANK CONTROL CONSOLE 12 FT. TEST TANK STATIC PUMP 6&FT. TEST TANK STATIC PUMP CYCLIC PUMP SURGE TANK ACCUMULATOR i I75 IN. TEST TANK *AVALLABLE FOR BOTH STATIC AND CYCLIC TESTS Deep-submergence test pressure complex at Navy Ship Research and Development Center, Carderock, Maryland 102 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM 27 ft. Its static pressure capability will be 12,000 psi, equivalent to 27,000 ft depth. This pressure can be attained in two hours. It will be able to take most of the present generation of small submersibles intact, and the pressure hulls of larger vehicles. This chamber’s cycling capability will be 4000 psi, at one cycle per minute. A medium tank will have an inside diameter of 4 ft and an overall length of 12 ft. It will have the same static-pressure capability of 12,000 psi, but will be able to achieve this pressure in nine minutes instead of two hours. Cycle pressure and time ranges will be the same as those of the large chamber. Still in the design stage is the superpressure tank. With dimensions the same as the medium tank, its pressure limit will be 26,000 psi. The cycling limit will be 10,000 psi, at one cycle. All of the vessels will have closures that are quick opening. Each will contain inside the tank a 500-channel digital data-acquisition system and a closed-circuit TV to monitor the test item. A survey has been completed of all government agencies and activities interested in the ocean environment in order to obtain information for coordination scheduling and efficient utilization of the facility. OCEAN ENGINEERING TEST FACILITY The Ocean Engineering Test Facility has been established on San Cle- mente Island off the southern California coast. The Test Facility is oper- ated by the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Pasadena, California. For the entire spectrum of national undersea technology effort, it is important to have facilities where the equipment being developed can be tested in the actual sea environment. Many pieces of equipment which work well in the laboratory or in a pressure-test facility fail to operate properly when they are placed in the corrosive, hostile, and relatively un- known environment associated with the depths of the sea. Marine life starts to grow on delicate sensors, electronic cells are set up between dif- ferent metals, with the sea water serving as an excellent electrolyte, and equipment performance degrades due to marked changes in pressure, tem- perature, and salinity with depth. It is anticipated that this facility will be open to the scientific and tech- nological communities, public and private. Users will be expected to pay a prorated share of operating costs and depreciation. ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 103 PORT HUENEME (NCEL) PASADENA (NUWC) LONG. BEACH (NAVAL SHIPYARD) SANTA BARBARA S SANTA CATALINA SHALLOW TEST AREA toe N LA JOLLA SAN PT. LOMA ; (NUWC/SD) MILES e000 yee ©. [© 20 20) Zo) SO) [Erect WSS TT Tee Channel Island area ocean engineering test facility. For the entire spectrum of national undersea technology effort, public and private, the Channel Islands are ideally situated for actual sea environmental testing of equipment being developed. The Channel Island test facility offers favorable weather conditions, support available from naval activities, a range of ocean depth easily available, and a general clarity of the water. This geographic location provides a wide variety of ocean depths and bottom conditions. Six thousand foot depths are available in several loca- tions, while depths in excess of 12,000 ft can be found 50 to 60 miles south- west of San Clemente Island. The island is within 65 miles of Los Angeles and San Diego, is convenient to the Navy fleet, Navy laboratories, and industrial and oceanographic complexes of the area. Facilities available on the island include an airplane runway, berthing and messing, communica- tions, and a 550-ft-long pier. Scheduled airline flights are available daily to the island. 104 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The primary test area for ocean engineering experiments is a four-by- five-mile area located off the eastern side of the island. This is the area where the full-scale Polaris underwater launch tests are conducted, and where tests on the Navy’s new Poseidon missile are being run. In this test area, graduated depths down to 4000 ft are available. A bottom-mounted, two-dimensional underwater positioning system has been installed, which is composed of precisely located navigation transponders which can be used to track submerged objects and evaluate the accuracy of vehicle sensors. In addition, portable underwater television and photo- graphic equipment can be provided to observe and record test operations. Other tests, primarily for radar equipment, underwater communications, and telemetry, can be conducted in this area or in the generally uninstru- mented area on the west side of the island. Future Sealab experiments are planned for the offshore area commenc- ing in the spring of 1968 with Sealab III. DEEP OCEAN SIMULATION LABORATORY The Deep Ocean Simulation Laboratory at the Navy Civil Engineering Laboratory, Port Heuneme, California, has been established to simulate the deep ocean environment in order to investigate the behavior of materials and structural components. The facility consists of six permanently mounted, 9 in. ID, 26 in. long, pressure vessels, one 18 in. ID, 26 in. long, pressure vessel and three portable 9 in. vessels. All vessels have a 20,000 psi safe working capacity and use seawater as the pressurizing medium. The permanently mounted vessels have the capability of varying the tempera- ture from ambient to 0°C and monitoring factors such as salinity and oxygen content. Provisions have been made for optical viewing, internal lighting, and instrumentation connection inside these vessels. Plans for ex- pansion include a 72 in. ID, 120 in. inside length, 5,500 psi pressure vessel for use with sea water. The Deep Ocean Simulation Laboratory has been used to examine the short and long term hydrostatic effects on structural materials and equip- ment, such as concrete spherical hull models, acrylic windows, miniature lights, lights and cameras for Sealab III, and buoyancy spheres for the CURV vehicle. A Deep Ocean Test Instrument Placement and Observa- tion System (DOTIPOS) has been designed to assist in situ investigation of the ocean bottom to a 6000 ft depth. Tests will be performed such as in situ vane-shear measurement of bottom soils and long-term settlement be- havior of bottom soils. ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 105 The former Landing Ship Medium (Rocket) ELK RIVER (LSMR-S501), which is being modified to serve as the surface-support ship for Sealab III. The support ship, to be redesignated the IX-501, is being lengthened from 203 ft to 225 ft, and will have a center well. In addition, it will be equipped with a 65-ton-capacity traveling gantry crane. Eight-foot sponsons are being added to both sides to provide additional work space and stability. In support of diving operations, the ship will have two Deck Decompression Chambers (DDCs) and two Personnel Transfer Cap- sules (PTCs). Shown on the deck of the IX-501 are the command and medical vans which will monitor the Sealab III aquanauts. 106 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The Deep Ocean Simulation Laboratory at NCEL, showing six 9-in.-ID pressure vessels and one 18-in.-ID pressure vessel used to simulate the deep-ocean environment. Tanks in the background are for sea water storage. DOTIPOS consists of a bottom-resting underwater observation, control, data transmission, and power supply system. The bottom-resting part of the system is a support platform to which a TV camera, a photographic camera, a data and command telemetry package, and suitable lights are attached. Provision is made to supply up to 15 kw electrical power to in situ sensors, tools, and other devices which may be needed in support of various studies. The platform is connected by multiconductor coaxial armored cable to a deck console aboard ship from which all control is ex- ercised and through which all data are received. EXPERIMENTAL DIVING UNIT The U. S. Navy Experimental Diving Unit, an activity of the Naval Ship Systems Command, Washington, D. C., is charged with the responsibility to perform experimental work in connection with diving and other related matters, conduct development and testing of diving suits, face masks, and associated equipment, and to develop diving methods and procedures. To accomplish this mission the staff consists of medical doctors, engineers and divers. ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 107 \ IMUM WORKING PRESSURE - 422 AXIMUM WATER DEPTH-949f% “HEIGHT 22ft X iOft DIAMETER LOA 2@6ft (CHAMBER 6-ft DIA) The Navy Experimental Diving Unit (EDU) test complex. Pressure facilities like these are used in development and testing of diving equipment, diving methods, and procedures. The present active projects at the Experimental Diving Unit include the technical evaluation of several types of sophisticated scuba, portable air compressors, depth gages, communication equipment, face masks and mouth pieces. In diving physiology, experiments are conducted to deter- mine the proper use of multi-inert gas, synthetic breathing mixtures, to ex- tend knowledge of carbon dioxide elimination, to find more efficient methods of decompressing after exposure to high pressure, and to inves- tigate the means of decompressing after the human body has become com- pletely saturated with inert gas on a very long dive. The basic equipment used for the work consists of two wet/dry pres- sure vessels. Each is made up of a water tank approximately ten feet deep with a dry lock on top and facilities for locking personnel into or out of connected recompression chambers. Tanks and chambers have a simulated working depth in salt water of 1000 ft. The dive profile in the tank can be made to suit either unsaturated dives or saturated dives. The lengthy decompression times involved in saturated diving require complete logistic facilities for the divers. 287-778 O - 68 - 8 108 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM ATLANTIC UNDERSEA TEST AND EVALUATION CENTER The Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center has been established with headquarters at West Palm Beach, Florida. An extensive center which is located at Andros Island, Bahamas, for testing undersea vehicles, weapons, and weapon systems is partially opera- tional, with completion planned for 1970. ORLANDO = AUTEC FLORIDA “SQPORT OF 3 “APALM BEACH ay Sas ORTH poe = e KEY WEST ANDROS ISLAND TEST FACILITY NAUTICAL MILES N 0 25 50 A Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center (AUTEC), an exten- sive center for testing undersea vehicles, weapons, and weapon systems, offers many fringe benefits to the Navy and private industry in ocean engineering and oceanography. The problems of installing and monitor- ing equipment at depths on the test center will assist in developing ocean engineering techniques. In addition, biological, chemical, fish and many other needed studies in the sea can be conducted at AUTEC. ENGINEERING AND TEST FACILITIES 109 Plates of structural and machinery materials be- ing mounted on a rack. The rack with plates was submerged in the Tongue of the Ocean (TOTO) off the Miami, Florida coast. TOTO offers mooring depths to 6000 ft. The material plates will remain submerged and exposed to the undersea environ- ment for five years (in some instances longer) and then recovered and tested to determine degradation. The test center was established to carry out the following functions: e Perform operational evaluations of advanced undersea weapon sys- tems and components. Measure submerged submarine tactical characteristics. Measure submarine noise and target strength. Calibrate large, low frequency sonar transducers and test sonobuoys. Evaluate attack effectiveness of submarines, surface ships, and air- craft in competitive type exercises. The test center can also provide the Navy with an Atlantic test range capability for oceanographic instrumentation and ocean engineering de- velopments. OCEAN ENGINEERING AND A NEW INITIATIVE: DEEP OCEAN TECHNOLOGY OCEAN ENGINEERING AND DEEP SUBMERGENCE It is obvious that while pursuing national defense objectives, the Navy has an obligation to the national interest in ocean technology. The Navy would like to see its dollars perform double duty in supporting the civilian sector as well as the military. The Navy has accepted the responsibility for helping to develop the undersea technology needed for effective use of the sea in the military, economic, social and political sense. This must be a corporate venture: ascience-industry-Navy team. The PSAC oceanography report recommends that the nation’s oceanographic activities be supported by the Navy “‘in discharging its mission of national security through its laboratories and industry and through ONR support of civilian institutions, as well as by its supporting role in the development of undersea technology and provision of national test facilities.’* The Navy Ocean Science Pro- gram has actively and intensely pursued knowledge of the ocean environ- ment and pioneered the use of manned undersea vehicles. Knowledge of the ocean environment is not synonymous with ability to exploit this environment. Exploitation depends on man’s ability to live and work in the ocean environment. This definition is broad enough to cover ocean engineering in general. Navy ocean engineering is that technology which enables the Navy to operate at any depth, at any time, anywhere in the ocean. Recent history provides two classic examples of need for a Navy capability in underwater search, rescue, and salvage. The loss of the submarine THRESHER in 1963 occurred beyond collapse depth of the hull and precluded rescue of any personnel. It was, however, in the Navy and national interest to locate the hull to determine if possible the cause of the casualty. THRESHER was located in 8500 ft of water, and much of the hull was photographed by instruments towed from Navy research **Pffective Use of the Sea,” Report of the Panel on Oceanography, President’s Science Advisory Committee, The White House, June 1966. 110 A NEW INITIATIVE iL ships and its bathyscaph TRIESTE. This casualty focused national atten- tion on Navy capabilities underwater, and while it showed that much had been accomplished it was determined that more should be done. The second event was the loss of an unarmed nuclear weapon off the Mediterranean Coast in 1966. This event accentuated the tremendous dif- ficulty of exploring and searching the ocean depths, even though the latest sensors were being employed and services of the then operational United States deep diving vehicles were being utilized. These craft included ALVIN, which located the weapon on the sea floor, Reynolds ALUMI- NAUT, which located significant pieces of aircraft debris in its underwater search, and the shallow diving Perry CUBMARINE, which located numer- ous pieces of debris from the aircraft. The weapon was recovered by the unmanned vehicle CURV. CURV is a product of ocean engineering work at the Navy Undersea Warfare Center, Pasadena, California. In 1966 the Office of the Oceanographer of the Navy was established to provide a better focus for Navy oceanographic programs and to better mobilize our resources within the Navy to face the many challenges ahead. The Deep Submergence Systems Project (DSSP) was established as a sepa- rate Project within the Naval Material Command. The DSSP was launched in 1964 to develop and deliver to the fleet new underwater capabilities: a new rescue system, a large object salvage system, diver tools, the tech- niques of saturated diving for extended operations on the continental Shelf, and new submersible vehicles capable of searching the ocean floors. In development is a rescue vehicle capable of transferring personnel be- tween two fully submerged submarines, the Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV). This vehicle will be delivered to the fleet in 1968-1969. The DSRV will be air transportable and submarine transportable and will be deliverable anywhere in the world. A large object salvage system will substantially increase recovery capa- bilities from the continental shelf. Employing saturated diving and other advanced diving techniques and hardware developed during the Sealab experiments, these systems represent a radical improvement in the Navy’s continental shelf and deep ocean recovery capability. The Navy is developing plans for a Deep Submergence Search Vehicle (DSSV) whose mission is ultimately to conduct sea floor search to a depth of 20,000 ft, providing coverage of 98 percent of the worlds oceans. The NR-1, a small nuclear-powered research and ocean engineering vehicle, is being developed jointly by the Navy and the AEC. The long 112 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM submerged endurance capability will add a new dimension to ocean engi- neering and research. These preceding major development programs are underway in under- water search, rescue and salvage. These programs are of some urgency and are the Navy response to Navy operational requirements, with devel- opments leading to a specific operating capability in a specified time frame. A NEW INITIATIVE: DEEP OCEAN TECHNOLOGY The result of a recent Navy study which proposed a plan for the Navy’s future role in undersea technology, is the Deep Ocean Technology Pro- gram, established in the FY 68 budget request. The Deep Ocean Tech- nology Program is broadly based. The objective of the program is to pro- vide the Navy with a technological base from which options for improving present undersea warfare systems and developing future ones can be selected. Since the ocean technology required to support national security objectives is exactly similar to that required for economic, commercial, and political purposes, this program will also provide a large measure of support to other national objectives. The Navy is developing a comprehensive program which will identify the ocean technology required to improve the Navy’s capability to meet the future threats and fully exploit the potential of the undersea environ- ment. To this end a focal project philosophy has been established to identify and encourage development of the broad range of technologies involved. The focal project established for the Deep Ocean Technology Program is Seascope, an experimental manned sea floor base. The technologies re- quired to establish. this project will support the Navy missions in strategic deterrence, antisubmarine warfare, antishipping warfare, underwater recon- naissance, search, location, rescue and recovery. The Seascope technologies will provide direct support to many of the other eight program areas selected by the National Council on Marine Resources and Engineering Development for increased emphasis in its first report to the President. These areas include: @ International cooperation @ Food from the sea ® Surveys of mineral resources ®@ Ocean observation and prediction A NEW INITIATIVE 113 As nations undertake major programs in ocean exploration and exploi- tation, the military role of powers may change. Major changes may be sought in the scope and interpretation of current laws and conventions pertaining to the oceans and their resources. Historically, the presence of effective military power at strategic locations in the oceans has exerted a significant influence on the negotiations to effect such changes. Factors which could contribute to an international confrontation re- resulting from competition in exploitation of petroleum, mineral, and fish resources of the sea are: @ Substantial increase in world population will result in an accelerated resource utilization. @ Increasing industrialization of nations will result in an increase in mineral resource consumption. The Army Corps of Engineers has requirements relating to the thorough understanding of the near shore environment as it affects beach construc- tion and similar Army activities. The Army and Air Force in the operation of certain test ranges have requirements for acoustic impact and tracking systems and, in some cases, require deep ocean location and recovery capability. The Bureau of Mines is adapting terrestrial drilling and sam- pling techniques to the waters of the continental shelf, and may be ex- pected to maintain a strong interest in technology which may have impact on undersea mining capabilities. Beyond supporting specific Navy operational requirements, the Deep Ocean Technology program will support additional national objectives. @ The ocean technology developed to support military requirements in the area of sound scattering in the ocean will also be useful in determining the density, distribution, and migratory patterns of life in the sea. This capability will provide direct support for exploita- tions of food resources. @ The technology developed for supporting military hydrographic and Oceanographic survey requirements are complementary with those required for surveying mineral resources of the sea floor and below. @ Military requirements in support of ocean observation and predic- tion have and will continue to provide technological spin off to other national interests—commercial shipping, fishing, etc. @ The technology developed to establish a manned one-atmosphere sea floor laboratory will provide options for improving man’s use of the shoreline by projecting commercial marine facilities seaward from urban areas. 114 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM The Deep Ocean Technology Program is specifically oriented to pro- vide the advanced undersea technology necessary to assure national pre- eminence in undersea warfare. This technology includes coordinated development of materials, structures, energy conversion, sensors, naviga- tion, communications, machinery, and control, and sea floor engineering. In fiscal year 1968, the following developments were initiated. CUR V—Development of a 7000 ft unmanned recovery system for locat- ing and recovering objects, surveying and inspecting underwater facilities, and constructing and maintaining underwater facilities. Tandem Propulsion—A program is underway to design and construct a small submersible utilizing a tandem propulsion system to enhance maneuverability vital to near-bottom operations. Glass Pressure Hulls—A project has been initiated to utilize the tremen- dous compressive strength of glass for lightweight deep submersible pres- sure hulls. Fully Submerged Electric Drive System—A self-synchronous, brushless motor with dc characteristics will be evaluated under simulated deep- submergence operating conditions. Fixed Structures—Site surveys and selections of potential sites for the Seascope installation will begin. Structural configurations, and the engi- neering aspects of the ingress-egress system, will be studied. The FY 69 program will, in addition to the FY 68 projects, include ini- tiation of other projects identified as directly responsive to defense needs, oriented around the framework of specific experimental systems. These in- clude advanced power sources such as fuel cells and Stirling or Rankine cycle engines, massive glass and high strength metals, unmanned submersi- ble developments based on CURV, and optic/acoustic imaging systems. * * * A NEW INITIATIVE WS EPILOGUE The Report of the President’s Council on Marine Resources and Engi- neering Development* noted: “The major challenges which lie ahead of this Nation do not terminate at the water’s edge. Neither do the solutions.” It is clear then that the Department of Defense will continue to have a major role in developing and implementing the policies which the federal government follows in using the oceans to achieve national objectives. The development of these policies is the responsibility of the federal govern- ment in concert with state and local governments as well as the industrial and academic communities. The Council report further states: “The time is ripe to apply our knowledge of the sea. To be sure there is much that we still do not know— this will always be true—but we know more of the sea than our actions towards exploitation might suggest. The technology is ready—new struc- tural materia!s, miniaturized electronics, computers, nuclear power, under- water vehicles. These tools await utilization.” The Navy, as the principal agent of the Department of Defense con- cerned with the oceans, has a strong program which has developed or is de- veloping many of these tools. Certain of these tools, such as nuclear power for propulsion and underwater vehicles, were developed initially for na- tional defense systems, but the technology was then applied to Navy oceanographic problems. The spin off value to the national oceanographic program of developments such as the Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle, and the nuclear powered research submersible, NR-1, is obvious. Engineer- ing developments such as these take several years and millions of dollars. They come about through the interaction of scientists and engineers, acting in the government—industry—academic milieu. The Navy will continue to share its knowledge and developments such as these with the other par- ticipants in the vital and expanding national oceanographic program. *“Marine Science Affairs—A Year of Transition.”” The First Report of the President to the Congress on Marine Resources and Engineering Development, Feb. 1967. APPENDIX A Partial list of Navy and Navy-Supported Organizations concerned with the Navy Ocean Engineering Program NAVAIR NAVELEX NAVFAC NAVORD NAVSHIPS DSSP OCEANAV Commander Naval Air Systems Command Headquarters Washington, D.C. 20360 Commander Naval Electronic Systems Command HQ Bailey’s Crossroads, Virginia 22041 Commander Naval Facilities Engineering Command HQ Washington, D.C. 20390 Commander Naval Ordnance Systems Command HQ Washington, D.C. 20360 Commander Naval Ship Systems Command Headquarters Washington, D.C. 20360 Project Manager Deep Submergence Systems Project 6900 Wisconsin Avenue Chevy Chase, Maryland 20015 Oceanographer of the Navy The Madison Building 732 N. Washington Street Alexandria, Virginia 22314 116 APPENDIX A 1 NCCCLC Commander Naval Command Control Communications Laboratory Center San Diego, California 92152 NSRDC Commanding Officer and Director Naval Ship Research and Development Center Washington, D.C. 20007 NSRDC/A Officer in Charge Annapolis Division Naval Ship Research and Development Center Annapolis, Maryland 21402 NMDL Commanding Officer and Director U.S. Navy Mine Defense Laboratory Panama City, Florida 32402 NADC Commanding Officer U. S. Naval Air Development Center Johnsville Warminster, Pennsylvania 18974 NOL/WO Commander U. S. Naval Ordnance Laboratory White Oak Silver Spring, Maryland 20910 NWC Commander Naval Weapons Center China Lake, California 93555 NWCCL Commanding Officer Naval Weapons Center Corona Laboratories Corona, California 91720 NUWC Commander Naval Undersea Warfare Center 3203 E. Foothill Boulevard Pasadena, California 91107 118 NUWC/SD NCEL NUWRES NUSL NASL NRDL NATF(SI) NRL THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM Officer in Charge San Diego Division Naval Undersea Warfare Center 271 Catalina Boulevard San Deigo, California 92152 Commanding Officer and Director U. S. Naval Civil Engineering Laboratory Port Hueneme, California 93041 Commanding Officer U.S. Naval Underwater Weapons Research and Engineering Station Newport, Rhode Island 02844 Commanding Officer and Director U.S. Navy Underwater Sound Laboratory Fort Trumbull New London, Connecticut 06321 Commanding Officer and Director U.S. Naval Applied Science Laboratory Flushing and Washington Avenues Brooklyn, New York 11251 Commanding Officer and Director U. S. Naval Radiological Defense Laboratory San Francisco, California 94135 Commanding Officer U.S. Naval Air Test Facility (Ship Installations) U. S. Naval Air Station Lakehurst, New Jersey 08733 Director Naval Research Laboratory Washington, D.C. 20390 APPENDIX A NARL Director U.S. Naval Arctic Research Laboratory Pt. Barrow, Alaska 99723 Government Owned, Contractor Operated Laboratories APL/JHU Director Applied Physics Laboratory Johns Hopkins University 8621 Georgia Avenue Silver Spring, Maryland 20901 APL/UW Director Applied Physics Laboratory University of Washington 1013 Northeast 40th Street Seattle, Washington 98105 ORL/PSU Director Ordnance Research Laboratory Pennsylvania State University P. O. Box 30 State College, Pennsylvania 16801 19 120 THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM NATIONAL/DOD/NAVY OCEANOGRAPHY (Basic Organizational Relationships) OCT. 1, 1967 BUREAU COMMISSION OFFICE OF VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE ON MARINE SCIENCE AND NATIONAL COUNCI BUDGET SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY ON MARINE RESEARCH | COMMITTEE ON MARINE RESEARCH, EDUCATION, AND FACILITIES COMMITTEE ON FOOD FROM THE SEA COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL POLICY IN THE MARINE SCIENCES COMMITTEE ON EXPLORATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES COMMITTEE ON MULTIPLE USES OF THE COASTAL ZONE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE DIRECTOR LEGEND DEFENSE RESEARCH POLVCY sc css os os os os os oo AND ENGINEERING GUIDANCE somerrrrwrwwnr wma ee CE) _______ PROGRAM MANAGEMENT iiss a UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY IS A MEMBER. * SECRETARY OF THE NAVY IS A MEMBER. SECRETARY a CHAIRMAN IS ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE OF THE NAVY(RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT) NAVY DEFENSE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OCEANOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE OF THE NAVY fr7==< POLICY & PROGRAMS AGENCY (R&D) = OF NAVAL RESEARCH TEE SPEC ASSIST FOR ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES CHIEF OFFICE OF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS NAVAL RESEARCH OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS = (MAPPING, CHARTING, & GEODESY) TAU Win iT] COMMANDER, CHIEF CHIEF OF THE OCEANOGRAPHER NAVAL WEATHER OF BUREAU OF OF THE ADVISORY BOARD SERVICE COMMAND NAVAL MATERIAL MEDICINE & SURGERY NAVY { PROPOSED | DEPUTY CHIEF OF OFFICE NAVAL MATERIAL OF THE ( DEVELOPMENT ) OCEANOGRAPHER ASSISTANT FOR ASSISTANT FOR ASSISTANT FOR DEFENSE COMMANDS pa SUPPORTING fantis senaetrat A CEAN St OCEAN ENENEEG OPERATION (CNR OPERATING FORCES COMMAND NAVY VACANT (DCHM (0) SECRETARY OF THE NAVY ASSISTANT SECRETARY Ou NAVAL OPERATIONS OCEANOGRAPHER OF THE ! NAVY >E>K ASSISTANT FOR OCEANOGRAPHIC OPERATIONS (VACANT) NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE {ADMIN OF THE NAVY > TEETH (RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT | Eo CHET NAVAL RESEARCH NAVAL RESEARCH LABORATORY ONR OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS ADVISORY BOARD (PROPOSED) OFFICE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHER OF THE NAVY ASSISTANT FOR OCEAN SCIENCE (CNR) NAVAL UNDERSEA WARFARE CENTER NAVAL SHIPS R&D CENTER NAVAL APP. SCIENCE LAB NAVAL ORDNANCE LABORATORY (WO) APPENDIX A YI NAVY OCEANOGRAPHY E> (Organizational Relationships) GUIDANCE TTC nn OCT. 1, 1967 COMMAND/CONTRACT/CONTROL —_——_———— OCEANOGRAPHIC POLICY AND PROGRAM BOARD (OPPB) CHIEF OF NAVAL DEPUTY CHIEF DEPUTY CHIEF***] | QCEANOGRAPHER DEVELOPMENT OF NAVAL OPERATIONS) }OF NAVAL OPERATIONS OF THE (DCNM(D) )>k2« (DEVELOPMENT) (FOR) NAVY 2K > CHAIRMAN. OPPB *CKMEMBER, OPPB We DOUBLE HATTED TO OCEANOGRAPHER DEPUTY CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS {FOR} DEPUTY CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS (DEVELOPMENT) DIRECTOR, ANTISUBHARINE WARFARE PROGRAMS amen NAVAL WEATHER oa BUREAU OF MEDICINE & SURGERY SERVICE COMMAND NAVAL MATERIAL WAVAL PERSONNEL NAVY SUBMARINE NAVAL Pa ee MEDICAL RESEARCH MEDICAL RESEARCH (DEVELOPMENT) LABORATORY INSTITUTE ASSISTANT FOR NAVY PROJECT MANAGERS T 0 OCEAN ENGINEERING TOXICOLOGY PHA PAT AND DEVELOPMENT UNIT (ASW SYSTEMS — IMDEEP SUBMERGENCE (DCNM(D PROJECTS] SYSTEMS PROJECTI NAVAL AIR ribenp SUPERVISOR APPLIED DEVELOPMENT SOUND OF PHYSICS CENTER LABORATORY SALVAGE LABORATORY (UW) NAVAL NAVY NAVY APPLIED CIVIL ENGINEERING MINE DEFENSE EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICS LABORATORY LABORATORY DIVING UNIT LABORATORY (JHU) NAVAL ORDNANCE RADIOLOGICAL DEFENSE RESEARCH LABORATORY LABORATORY {PSU) NAVAL UNDERWATER WEAPONS RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING STATION 122: THE NAVY OCEAN ENGINEERING PROGRAM NAVY OCEANOGRAPHY SECRETARY (Component Program Relationships) yi OCT. 1, 1967 SSISTANT Set OF THE NAVY (R&D) C ICEANOGRAPHEA it DCNO(D CHD, DCNO(F ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY wit (R&D) CHIEF LEGEND OF NAVAL OPERATIONS GUIDANCE y-scuarssstvsvitsniiieviiitiiniiti PROGRAM FLOW eee OFFICE OF THE CNO OCEANOGRAPHER ty DIRECTOR OF THE HOUT LL PULTE En OF NAVY (PROPOSED) ASW PROGRAMS (ASW OCEANOGRAPHY) FFICE OF THE OCEANOGRAPHER OF THE NAVY ASSISTANT FOR FSSTTANT FR OCEANOGRAPHIC ENGINEERING & OPERATIONS DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANT FOR OCEAN SCIENCE PM-11 LE [Dome [Tor [oe [Te [Pe To Tn LABORATORIES /FIELD ACTIVITIES /UNIVERSITIES & NON-PROFITS /INDUSTRY pe || [me] [oe] [ee |e) | (ne | |e NSRDC Annap, Div. OVER 100 UNIVERSITIES BROAD INDUSTRY PARTICIPATION U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1968 O - 287-778 ~ ENT CU { ( e Oceanographic | Woeds Hol OEMCO