Energy flux method for wave energy converters

Gabriel Thomas Scarlett, James Cameron McNatt, Alan Henry, Abel Arredondo-Galeana*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Hydrodynamic tools reveal information as to the behaviour of a device in the presence of waves but provide little information on how to improve or optimise the device. With no recent work on the transfer of power (energy flux) from a wave field through the body surface of a wave energy converter (WEC), we introduce the energy flux method to map the flow of power. The method is used to develop an open-source tool to visualise the energy flux density on a WEC body surface. This energy flux surface can also be used to compute the total power capture by integrating over the surface. We apply the tool to three WEC classes: a heaving cylinder, a twin-hulled hinged barge, and pitching surge devices. Using the flux surfaces, we investigate power efficiency in terms of power absorbed to power radiated. We visualise the hydrodynamic consequence of sub-optimal damping. Then, for two pitching surge devices with similar resonant peaks, we reveal why one device has a reduced power performance in a wave spectrum compared to the other. The results show the effectiveness of the energy flux method to predict power capture compared to motion-based methods and highlight the importance of assessing the flux of energy in WECs subjected to different damping strategies. Importantly, the tool can be adopted for a wide range of applications, from geometry optimisation and hydrodynamic efficiency assessment to structural design.
Original languageEnglish
Article number4991
JournalEnergies
Volume17
Issue number19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Oct 2024

Funding

This work is an outcome of the WEC.0 project which has been co-funded through the Ocean Energy ERA-NET by Scottish Enterprise, the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland, and the Swedish Energy Agency. This work was also funded by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) as part of the ‘Supergen ORE Impact Hub 2023’ [EP/Y016297/1].

Keywords

  • wave energy flux
  • wave energy converter
  • wave power

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