The invention substantially cuts the cost of HKEC systems because these systems may be retrofitted to existing bridge columns as well as to new bridge columns that support highway decks; the cost of the bridge structure may be fully absorbed by the cost of constructing the bridge. Consequently, the cost of this invention for generating electric energy from the HKEC system becomes substantially lower than what it would be without using the bridge structure; this invention will turn bridge columns into dual-use structures.
Therefore, this invention is a highly efficient HKEC system that extracts energy efficiently from waves, moving water and tidal flows.
Water in ocean, sea and rivers offer plenty of energy but the technology to harvest HKE energy from water is still in the experimental stages. Two of the problems facing HKEC systems are the cost and low efficiency of such systems.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/429,375 filed on Mar. 24, 2012, and now issued U.S. Pat. No. 8,459,020, and application PCT/US2013/031334 teach the following about existing technologies for HKEC systems: they require expensive investment in civil and mechanical systems to retain these systems in boisterous water during severe weather. Therefore HKEC systems require prohibitively expensive civil and mechanical structures to retain them during storms.
Highways over water are built on extremely strong columns that are capable of withstanding fiercest wind and water forces. These columns serve as dual-use inexpensive mounts for innovative HKEC systems of this invention. Further, this invention overcomes the well-known inefficiencies and immaturity of the submerged wave and water-energy conversion technologies in existence today.
Bridge columns offer multiple opportunities to harvest wave and related energy from water under the bridge. Bridge-column-based HKEC systems include the following embodiments but are not limited to them. The inventions listed below are to be of the appropriate scale to prevent overloading of the bridge columns beyond their designed strength. The embodiments below can be mounted on bridge-supporting columns already in use (retrofitted) or designed in the future as part of new bridge structures over water.
There are no known devices attached to bridge columns for harvesting energy in the water under bridges. The invention includes the following multiple embodiments but not limited to them.
This invention is a floating vertical-axis water-turbine-generator (VAWT-generator) that slides up and down the bridge column with the waves while the turbine is rotated by water currents, waves or tides by turning turbine blades dipping into the water to produce electricity. The generator may feed power to the power grid. The generator could be housed concentrically inside the turbine rotor or outside the rotor.
To explain the invention, a specific embodiment thereof is described with reference to
a is a top view of the apparatus with turbine blades with flaps.
b is a top view of the apparatus with solid turbine blades that fold in the upstream direction but stand up radially in the downstream direction during rotation.
a shows a fixed cylindrical sleeve mounted on the cylindrical column, and a float that slides on the fixed sleeve.
a shows the top view with two turbines driven by a single belt with a plurality of water turbine blades attached to it.
Referring to
The blades 5 are submerged in water but are attached to the turbine rotor 3 by arms 4. To reduce resistance to the rotation of the turbine blades, a flow deflector 7 diverts the incoming water away from the blades going upstream, but the water flow is unrestricted on the downstream side of the rotor in order to absorb energy from the water flow or waves or tides. Current, waves and tides apply rotary force on the downstream side to rotate turbine blades 5.
The detailed drawing of the blade in
In the top cross-sectional view of the apparatus in
b shows another embodiment of the blades for minimizing the resistance to blade movement on the upstream side. In this embodiment, blade 29 is hinged so that it can bend backwards on the upstream side.
The detailed vertical cross-section in
a shows bridge column 31a fitted with a sleeve 32a. The sleeve is anchored to the column to prevent the sleeve from rotation. The outer surface of the sleeve allows the float 33a to slide up and down on the sleeve with minimal friction.
a shows the top cross-sectional view of two circular VAWT-generators 47 wrapped around two bridge columns as a variation of one turbine apparatus shown in
A large float, which bobs up and down with the waves under a bridge, is attached to one or more rigid arms that are hinged at a high point in the bridge columns. The float or arms are connected to a reciprocating or rotary pump(s) to pump water up to fill water in a large overhead tank located just under the bridge deck. The elevated water in the tank is released through ducts to drive a water turbine(s) below to produce electric power. After driving the turbine, the spent water falls back into the body of water under the bridge.
Embodiment 2 could be used to pressurize air, gas or any fluid to drive turbines that turn electric generators.
a: This is a cross-sectional side view of the apparatus in
a is a side view of the apparatus showing overhead reservoir 78 with water duct allowing the directed flow of water to water turbine 79 kept above the waterline.
In this embodiment, the vertical movement of the wave is translated to a linear motion of a geared rack, which drives a pinion attached to an electric generator. The generator shaft has a flywheel to smooth the ensuing rotary motion and power of the generator because the power flowing from the vertical up and down motion of the wave is cyclical, not constant.
In this embodiment, an horizontal-axis water turbine-generator (HAWT-generator) is turned by flowing water impinging on the turbine blades below the center line of the turbine. The turbine is floated so that only the turbine blades below the center line of the turbine are submerged below the water line. The water turbine turns an electric generator integral with the turbine's axis or the generator may be driven by a gear system powered by the water turbine. The electricity generated is fed to the grid.
In
This is a continuation-in-part of, and claims priority commonly assigned to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/429,375 filed on Mar. 24, 2012, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,459,020, issued Jun. 11, 2013, and application PCT/US2013/031334 filed on Mar. 14, 2013 filed through the USPTO, the receiving office, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2013/031334 | 3/14/2013 | WO | 00 | 8/8/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/148243 | 10/3/2013 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140084589 A1 | Mar 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13429375 | Mar 2012 | US |
Child | 13984498 | US |