1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a flexible structure for generating electrical energy from wave motions.
2. Description of the Related Art
The kinetic energy of waves may be used to generate electrical energy. One option, for example, is to use floating bodies which are movably joined to each other and whose movement relative to each other drives a generator. Such devices are known from the published European patent document EP 1 115 976 B1, for example, where a device for generating energy from waves is claimed which includes a plurality of floating body members, which are joined to each other to form an articulated structure, each pair of adjoining body members being joined to the other via a coupling part in such a way that a relative rotational movement of the body members is possible, each coupling part including an element which is adapted to generate energy from the relative rotational movement of the body members, and the device further including means to apply a roll bias angle away from the horizontal and/or vertical direction to the axis of the relative rotational movement on each coupling part. This device is characterized by including variable constraining means which are provided on every coupling part and which are adapted to apply periodically varying constraints to the relative rotation of every pair of adjoining body members in response to the prevailing state of the sea.
Kinetic energy may also be converted into electrical energy with the aid of electroactive polymers (EAP). This requires recurring cycles of deformation and relaxation of the electroactive polymer. Electroactive polymers are characterized in that they change their shape when an electrical voltage is applied. As a result, electroactive polymers are used as actuators. As an alternative, EAPs allow an operation as a generator, in which mechanical strain energy is directly converted into electrical energy. The conversion takes place on a capacitive basis by the shifting of charges. During the generation of energy with the aid of electroactive polymers, the generator, including two resilient electrodes between which the electroactive polymer is introduced, is strained as a result of the action of an external force. In the state of maximal strain of the electroactive polymer generator, the assembly is acted upon by electrical charges below the breakdown field strength. When the action of the external force is reduced, the generator relaxes due to the elastic effect of the polymer. During this phase, the energy stored in the generator increases. This process constitutes the actual conversion of the mechanical movement into the electrical energy. As soon as the generator is completely relaxed, the assembly is discharged, whereby the generator returns to its original length. The energy generation cycle may start again.
The present invention provides a device for generating electrical energy from the motion of waves, or for converting kinetic energy into electrical energy, requiring no hydraulic transmission of the wave motion to a hydraulic motor, but instead using the electroactive polymers for power generation. The present invention further provides a method for generating electrical energy from the motion of waves, in which the kinetic energy is converted into electrical energy with the aid of electroactive polymers.
The device according to the present invention includes at least one flexible, floatable tube which is closed at both ends so that a hollow structure is formed. The tube is characterized by including a wall having at least one horizontal stack which extends in the longitudinal direction of the flexible, floatable tube and which includes at least one layer, having one tier made of an electroactive polymer and at least one tier serving as a flexible electrode. The tier made of an electroactive polymer and the electrode tier(s) of each layer are in direct contact with each other. The electrode tiers may be metallic or formed of conductive polymers.
In one specific embodiment, the wall of the flexible, floatable tube has multiple horizontal stacks extending in parallel to each other. In specific embodiments having multiple stacks extending in parallel to each other, these strands are joined to each other in a way that is impermeable to water and/or gas. The joining may be carried out, for example, by bonding or welding adjoining strands to each other. However, the strands may also be embedded into another material, preferably a polymer.
According to one specific embodiment, the at least one stack has multiple immediately consecutive layers, of which each layer is composed of one tier of an electroactive polymer and one tier serving as a flexible electrode. In this specific embodiment, the at least one stack has multiple two-tier layers so that the electrode tier of the one layer is also in contact with the tier made of an electroactive polymer of the next layer of the stack, and thus is the second electrode for the electroactive polymer of the subsequent layer.
According to one alternative specific embodiment, the at least one stack has multiple layers, of which each layer is composed of one tier of an electroactive polymer which is situated between two tiers serving as flexible electrodes, consecutive layers being separated from each other by at least one insulating tier. In this specific embodiment, the at least one stack has multiple three-tier layers, in which one tier of an electroactive polymer is flanked on both surfaces in each case by an electrode tier. The electrode tiers of adjoining layers are separated from each other in an electrically non-conducting manner by at least one interposed insulating tier, for example made of a non-conductive polymer. This specific embodiment offers the particular advantage that the flexibility of the device according to the present invention may be adjusted via the material selection for the insulating tiers and their thicknesses.
The stacks may be stacks made of consecutive, separate layers of a non-conductive polymer and of an electroactive polymer.
This means that the at least one stack is not designed in one piece. In one other specific embodiment, the layers may be designed as a one-piece component, for example by appropriately folding a film strip made of an electroactive polymer and/or an electrode strip, for example by fanfolding of this strip.
In one alternative specific embodiment, the flexible, floatable tube is formed of at least one helically wound strip which includes one tier of an electroactive polymer and at least one electrode tier, the tier of the electroactive polymer preferably being designed in the form of ring segments which are separated from each other. As an alternative, the helically wound strip may include a tier of an electroactive polymer, which is situated between two electrode tiers, and an insulating tier on at least one side of the strip. In this specific embodiment, the consecutive windings of the helix are fixedly joined to each other in a way that is impermeable to water and/or gas, so that they form the wall of the resulting flexible tube, the segments made of an electroactive polymer which are situated behind each other forming a stack.
The number of ring segments per winding of the helix (corresponding to 360°) may vary. In one specific embodiment, each winding may have two segments. With this specific embodiment, it is possible to use the movement of the helix in one plane for power generation. Each winding of the helix preferably has more than two ring segments, particularly preferably 4 ring segments. Each winding of the helix may also have 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 or more ring segments made of an electroactive polymer. More than 2 ring segments made of an electroactive polymer per winding of the helix allow the wave motion to be used, regardless of its direction.
All windings of the helix preferably have the same number of ring segments made of an electroactive polymer. However, the number of ring segments per winding in the cylindrical structure may also vary in relation to each other.
Regardless of the design of the wall of the tubes, the tubes are not open, but are closed at their two mutually opposing ends. In one specific embodiment, the tubes are closed by plates which are situated at the ends of the tube over the particular aperture. By closing the flexible tube, a cavity is formed in the interior which lends the tube its floatability.
In one specific embodiment, the flexible, floatable tube has a flexible spine in its cavity. The spine essentially extends over the entire length of the cavity and is made of a flexible material, which is adaptable to the wave motion. The spine may be a rod, a rope or a thin tube. The spine in the interior of the flexible, floatable tube prevents buckling or distortion of the flexible, floatable tube under large loads.
In one preferred specific embodiment, the flexible, floatable tube has spacers which are situated at certain intervals from each other along the longitudinal direction of the flexible, floatable tube. The spacers hold the spine in the interior of the flexible, floatable tube at essentially the same distance from the wall of the tube.
In one alternative or additional specific embodiment, the flexible, floatable tube has rings which surround the flexible, floatable tube or are integrated into the wall of the flexible, floatable tube between two layers of the stacks. The rings are situated at certain intervals from each other along the longitudinal direction of the flexible, floatable tube. The rings may be made of a metal, preferably steel, particularly preferably stainless steel, or of a polymer. By positioning the rings at certain intervals along the longitudinal axis of the flexible, floatable tube, buckling or distortion of the flexible, floatable tube is preventable.
In one further or additional specific embodiment, the cavity of the flexible, floatable tube is filled with a gas, a gas mixture or a liquid. For example, the liquid may be seawater. The filling of the cavity is preferably pressurized so that the forces acting from the outside on the structure, which may result in buckling or distortion of the flexible, floatable tube, are at least partially compensated for. The hollow, cylindrical structure may have at least one valve, with the aid of which the pressure of the filling is adjustable or controllable.
The device further includes control electronics, i.e., at least one electronic circuit, with the aid of which it is possible to switch back and forth between different sections of a stack to provide the initial charge, which is necessary for the power generation from wave motion with the aid of electroactive polymers, for one layer made of an electroactive polymer, or for the layers made of an electroactive polymer, in one section of the flexible, floatable tube.
In one preferred specific embodiment, different stacks made of consecutive layers and/or different sections of the same stack or of different stacks are connected to each other by the control electronics in such a way that a portion of the electrical energy generated during the discharge phase of the electroactive polymer of a stack section is usable for the initial charge of the layers made of an electroactive polymer of another section which are in the charging phase.
With its flexible, floatable tube, the device according to the present invention allows better adaptation of its movement to the wave motion than rigid floating bodies which are hinged together. In this way, power generation with the aid of electroactive polymers becomes possible, even with a relatively small swell. The device according to the present invention may be moored to the ocean bed and connected to land via a current-conducting cable.
The present invention covers a method for generating electrical energy from the motion of waves, i.e., from the kinetic energy of the waves, in particular a method in which the device according to the present invention is used.
In the method according to the present invention, the flexible, floatable tube floats on the water, preferably on the ocean, and is exposed to the wave motions. The flexible, floatable tube is bent by its own weight in the areas of the wave troughs and wave crests.
As a result, sections of the stacks are strained or compressed. In the area of the wave trough, the stack sections located in the water are strained and the stack sections opposite thereof and facing away from the water surface are compressed. In contrast, in the area of the wave crest, the stack sections located in the water are compressed and the stack sections opposite thereof and facing away from the water surface are strained. As a result of the continual wave motions, all stacks, stack sections and layers made of an electroactive polymer are subjected to a constantly recurring cycle of compression and strain. These cycles are used to generate electrical energy.
The generation of the electrical energy, or the power generation, using the device according to the present invention includes the following phases:
The method for generating electrical energy from wave motions is characterized in that the at least one flexible, floatable tube of a device, the device including at least one flexible, floatable tube which is closed at its two ends and includes a wall having at least one horizontal stack, which extends in the longitudinal direction of the tube and has at least one layer, including one tier made of an electroactive polymer and at least one tier serving as a flexible electrode, is exposed to the wave motions of water, sections of the stacks being strained or compressed, and the layers of the electroactive polymers in the compressed sections being charged with the aid of control electronics, and thereafter the excess electrical energy resulting from the relaxation of these sections and the associated separation of the charges in the electroactive polymer of this area being extracted by a capacitive discharge phase.
The present invention is described in greater detail hereafter with reference to the drawings and concrete exemplary embodiments. It must be taken into consideration that neither the drawings nor the concrete specific embodiments used for the description shall be construed to limit the present invention.
Tube 1 is floatable and so flexible that it is adaptable to the motion of water 2 on its surface, i.e., the wave topography. Sections of flexible, floatable tube 1 are bent as a result, the wall areas of the bent sections which have a smaller radius than the spine in the same section being compressed, and the areas of the same bent section which are located opposite these areas and which have a larger radius than the spine in the same section being strained, relative to the extended rectilinear rest position of flexible, floatable tube 1. A compressed area is indicated in
Tube 12 further has rings 20 which are provided with boreholes, strands 9 running through their walls, and which are situated at regular intervals from each other along tube 12.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 080 120.0 | Jul 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/063888 | 7/16/2012 | WO | 00 | 6/3/2014 |