The extraction of energy from ocean waves has been investigated in Europe since the 1970s. During the research process hundreds of devices have been proposed and a few of them have been built full scale and deployed to the ocean. Unlike other renewable energies, so far there has not been a device standing out to be the most suitable to exploit wave power. One of the practical problems to be solved in a Wave Energy Converter (WEC) is durability in the harsh marine environment. This could be critical if parts of the converter such as turbine rotors or auxiliary floats are needed to move or to react while exposed to seawater and spray. One method to solve the problem is to use a WEC composed just by one sealed floating body carrying a gyroscope. The inertial effects of the gyroscope are activated by the float motion and are used to drive a generator. The whole system operates in the clean environment inside the float. In this work a procedure to design the ISWEC device (Inertial Sea Wave Energy Converter) is outlined. The mechanical equations describing the system are linearized, studied in the frequency domain and used as a mathematical tool in the design process. The method is then applied iteratively to design a scaled prototype model to be tested in the wave tank at the University of Naples. The final version of the prototype model is then scaled up to evaluate the performances of a full scale device.
ISWEC: DESIGN OF A PROTOTYPE MODEL FOR WAVE TANK TEST / Bracco, Giovanni; Giorcelli, Ermanno; Mattiazzo, Giuliana. - ELETTRONICO. - (2010). (Intervento presentato al convegno ASME 2010 10th Biennal Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis (ESDA 2010) tenutosi a Istanbul (TR) nel July 12-14, 2010).
ISWEC: DESIGN OF A PROTOTYPE MODEL FOR WAVE TANK TEST
BRACCO, GIOVANNI;GIORCELLI, Ermanno;MATTIAZZO, Giuliana
2010
Abstract
The extraction of energy from ocean waves has been investigated in Europe since the 1970s. During the research process hundreds of devices have been proposed and a few of them have been built full scale and deployed to the ocean. Unlike other renewable energies, so far there has not been a device standing out to be the most suitable to exploit wave power. One of the practical problems to be solved in a Wave Energy Converter (WEC) is durability in the harsh marine environment. This could be critical if parts of the converter such as turbine rotors or auxiliary floats are needed to move or to react while exposed to seawater and spray. One method to solve the problem is to use a WEC composed just by one sealed floating body carrying a gyroscope. The inertial effects of the gyroscope are activated by the float motion and are used to drive a generator. The whole system operates in the clean environment inside the float. In this work a procedure to design the ISWEC device (Inertial Sea Wave Energy Converter) is outlined. The mechanical equations describing the system are linearized, studied in the frequency domain and used as a mathematical tool in the design process. The method is then applied iteratively to design a scaled prototype model to be tested in the wave tank at the University of Naples. The final version of the prototype model is then scaled up to evaluate the performances of a full scale device.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2372359
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