S. Korea's first 3,000-ton sub capable of firing ballistic missiles delivered for mission

By Lim Chang-won Posted : August 13, 2021, 16:20 Updated : August 13, 2021, 16:20

[Yonhap Photo]

SEOUL -- South Korea's first 3,000-ton submarine capable of firing ballistic missiles was delivered for naval missions. It will be deployed in August 2022 after a year of operational capability assessment. Details on its weapons system were not disclosed, but military experts say the new submarine has six vertical launchers for submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs).

The diesel-electric submarine named "Dosan Ahn Chang-ho" joined South Korea's naval submarine fleet after a ceremony on August 13 at the shipyard of Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (DSME). The submarine can sail at a maximum speed of 37 kilometers per hour with about 50 people aboard.

Installed with an air-independent propulsion system using fuel cell batteries, the new submarine can operate underwater for 20 days without surfacing. Diesel-electric submarines suffer from limited underwater endurance, particularly at high speed. When snorkeling, they are vulnerable to detection. An air-independent propulsion system was introduced to obtain long underwater endurance.

The 3,000-ton submarine is 83.5 meters long and 9.6 meters wide. South Korea has built 1,200-ton and 1,800-ton diesel-electric submarines with technical help from Germany’s Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft. Through the third phase, submarines of 3,000 tons or more are to be built. The development of a diesel-electric submarine equipped with lithium-ion batteries as a power source is underway.

The Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA), a state body controlled by the defense ministry, aims to deliver a 3,600-ton submarine with lithium-ion batteries in 2026. Lithium-ion batteries are more power-efficient, take up less space and improve underwater navigation capability and high-speed maneuvering compared to conventional lead-acid batteries. Submarines using lead-acid batteries surface regularly to vent poisonous fumes created in the processes of cooling and charging.

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