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Showing posts with label Ocean Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ocean Energy. Show all posts
7.19.2010
Wave Power-Renewable Energy
While watching the Great Show: Powering the Future (http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com/2010/07/powering-future-episode-guide-discovery.html) Discovery Channel show last night.  I've decided to research into Renewable Energy via the Oceans.  The 'World of Renewables' has some interesting information I'm sharing in its entirety.
What is Wave power?
Wave power refers to  the energy of ocean surface waves and the capture of that energy to do  useful work - including electricity generation, desalination, and the  pumping of water (into reservoirs). Wave power is a form of renewable  energy. Though often co-mingled, wave power is distinct from the diurnal  flux of tidal power and the steady gyre of ocean currents. Wave power  generation is not a widely employed technology, with only a few  experimental sites in existence.
In general, large waves are more  powerful. Specifically, wave power is determined by wave height, wave  speed, wavelength, and water density.
Wave size is determined  by wind speed and fetch (the distance over which the wind excites the  waves) and by the depth and topography of the seafloor (which can focus  or disperse the energy of the waves). A given wind speed has a matching  practical limit over which time or distance will not produce larger  waves. This limit is called a 'fully developed sea.'
The north  and south temperate zones have the best sites for capturing wave power.  The prevailing westerlies in these zones blow strongest in winter.
 Wave motion is highest at the surface and diminishes exponentially with  depth; however, wave energy is also present as pressure waves in deeper  water.
The potential energy of a set of waves is proportional  to wave height squared times wave period (the time between wave crests).  Longer period waves have relatively longer wavelengths and move faster.  The potential energy is equal to the kinetic energy (that can be  expended). Wave power is expressed in kilowatts per meter (at a location  such as a shoreline).
The formula below shows how wave power  can be calculated. Excluding waves created by major storms, the largest  waves are about 15 meters high and have a period of about 15 seconds.  According to the formula, such waves carry about 1700 kilowatts of  potential power across each meter of wavefront. A good wave power  location will have an average flux much less than this: perhaps about 50  kW/m.
Challenges
The  fundamental challenges of wave power are:
efficiently converting  wave motion into electricity... generally speaking, wave power is  available in low-speed, high forces and motion is not in a single  direction. Most readily-available electric generators like to operate at  higher speeds, with lower input forces, and they prefer to rotate in a  single direction.
constructing devices that can survive storm  damage and saltwater corrosion. Likely sources of failure include seized  bearings, broken welds, and snapped mooring lines. Knowing this,  designers may create prototypes that are so overbuilt that materials  costs prohibit affordable production.
low total cost of  electricity... wave power will only be competitive when total cost of  generation (p/kWhr) is reduced. The winning team will be the one that  develops the lowest-cost system (which includes the primary converter,  power takeoff system, mooring system, installation & maintenance  procedures)
While the industry has suffered too many failures to  continue, it has benefited in recent years from increases in support  from governments, universities, and angel investors. Several promising  prototypes are now in operation.
State of the art  methods
Existing wave power devices are  categorized by the method used to capture the energy of the waves, by  the intended location, and by the power take-off. Method types are wave  power point absorber, occupying a small area; wave power attenuator,  occupying a line parallel to wave propagation; and wave power  terminator, occupying a line perpendicular to wave propagation.  Locations are shoreline, offshore, and deep water. Types of power  take-off include these: hydraulic ram, elastomeric hose pump,  pump-to-shore, hydroelectric turbine, air turbine, and linear electrical  generator.
Systems include oscillating water column, articulated  pontoon, wave pump, anchored buoy, fixed buoy, and overtopping  reservoir. Several of these designs incorporate parabolic reflectors as a  means of increasing the wave energy at the point of capture.
 These are descriptions of some wave power systems:
The AquaBuOY  wave energy device: Energy transfer takes place by converting the  vertical component of wave kinetic energy into pressurized seawater by  means of two-stroke hose pumps. Pressurized seawater is directed into a  conversion system consisting of a turbine driving an electrical  generator. The power is transmitted to shore by means of a secure,  undersea transmission line.
A pontoon lying in the water is driven  by wave action to push or pull an electrical generator. (See Pelamis  Wave Energy Converter.)
Wave action compresses air in a tunnel  which drives the vanes of a generator.
A device called CETO,  currently being tested off Fremantle, Western Australia, has a seafloor  pressure transducer coupled to a high-pressure hydraulic pump, which  pumps water to shore for driving hydraulic generators or running reverse  osmosis desalination.
Waves overtop the side of a reservoir, and  the water in the reservoir runs hydroelectric generators.
 Potential
Wave power could yield much more  energy than tidal power. Tidal dissipation (friction, measured by the  slowing of the lunar orbit) is 2.5 terawatts. The energy potential of  waves is certainly greater, and wave power can be exploited in many more  locations. Countries with large coastlines and strong prevailing winds  (notably, Ireland and the UK) could produce five percent or more of  their electricity from wave power. Excess capacity (a problem common  with intermittent energy sources) could be used to produce hydrogen or  smelt aluminum. Article found at: http://www.worldofrenewables.com/knowledge_tech_wave_power.html
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