—Not applicable—
The present application relates generally to renewable energy, and more particularly to the generation of power by extracting energy from water waves.
The present application concerns the capture and conversion of solar energy that has been converted via surface wind into water waves. More specifically, the present application concerns the capture of both the heave (vertical) and surge (horizontal) water particle movement within waves for conversion into other forms of power, such as electricity.
We are concerned here with the oscillatory water particle motion internal to propagating water waves. The spatial and time scales of waves distinguish them from other ocean energy resources such as tides and currents.
The objective of wave-energy capture and conversion is not unlike that of harnessing a draft animal or locomotive, but, there are two important differences. First, wave motion is oscillatory, and second, fluids are more difficult to “grab hold of” and “hang onto”. A practical way by which we can “grab hold” of a fluid is to exploit the drag force on a submerged structure. Such drag force depends strongly on the shape of the submerged structure. Two structures designed for the drag they produce are the parachute and the sea anchor.
The drag force on an immersed structure is proportional to the area that faces the oncoming fluid flow and to the square of the speed of that flow relative to the immersed structure. The arrows in the right-hand column of
For certain types of wave energy converters, fluid drag on an immersed structure produces the forces needed to capture and convert wave energy into a more useful form. For these types of devices, in order to collect wave energy, the structure itself must move, and there are two limiting cases that serve to establish the range of this required motion. First, if the immersed structure does not move at all, the structure can reflect energy, but it cannot absorb energy. The stationary structure limit is called the sea-wall limit. The other limiting case is when the immersed structure moves in perfect harmony with the wave motion, i.e., no relative motion of the fluid and the structure. Here we have motion, but no force, and, thus, no energy is captured. This limit is called the sea-weed limit; i.e., the immersed structure sloshes back and forth like sea weed. The useful range of the speed of the immersed structure is between zero and the local speed of the fluid.
The physics of drag is momentum transfer, and is illustrated in
In
If the barrier is stationary (the sea-wall limit), the particle is reflected with the same speed. If the barrier recedes at the same velocity as the incoming particle (the sea-weed limit), then no collision occurs, and the momentum of the particle is unchanged. If, however, the barrier recedes at half the speed of the incoming particle, then the speed of the particle relative to that of the barrier is the same before and after the collision, but the direction is reversed. The particle is left with no speed at all. This is the physics underlying the Pelton turbine. To extract energy from fluid motion, it is known to devise a structure that can reverse the relative motion of the water and the immersed structure while moving the structure in the same direction as the water, but at nominally half its speed. Concave structures have a tendency to guide the fluid along a path that reverses the relative motion of the fluid and the immersed structure.
Since drag is proportional to the area of the immersed structure exposed to the wave front, the area of the WEC structure is a parameter that can affect system performance. The edges of the structure around which the water can flow (escape) is typically minimized. Further, the ratio of perimeter to area can affect system performance more than area alone. As with the more familiar surface-to-volume ratio, the perimeter-to-area ratio decreases as system size increases.
Two known WEC structures used to capture wave energy are the paddle and the buoy. Paddles are used primarily to capture the energy in surge (horizontal) water particle motion. They operate by oscillating back and forth in reaction to surge motion, and the paddle normally pivots about an axis parallel to the wave front. U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2006/0150626 describes a surge-type WEC whose paddle is completely submerged. U.S. Pat. No. 7,834,474 describes a surge-type WEC whose paddle extends to and through the water surface.
Buoys are used primarily to capture the energy in heave (vertical) water particle motion. U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2005/0121915 is representative of this group. U.S. Pat. No. 4,208,877 describes a submerged cylindrical buoy moored diagonally so as to capture energy from both surge and heave motion.
Most wave-energy converters (WECs) in operation today are convex or planar, that is, not concave.
WECs can be classified according to their geometry, that is, points, lines, and surfaces. WECs possessing a point geometry are called point absorbers, and they are typically approximately spherical. The sphere has a convex shape. An example of a substantially spherical point absorber is described in U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2005/0121915. In WECs possessing a point geometry, all three spatial dimensions are similar in magnitude.
A second class of WEC's is characterized by structures in which two of the spatial dimensions are similar in magnitude, while the third is significantly larger. One such structure is a cylinder, which is also convex. Such WECs can be oriented with the long dimension horizontal and parallel to the wave crests as in the device described by U.S. Pat. No. 4,208,877, or vertically as with the BioWave™ system described by U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2010/0156106.
In a third class of WECs, one spatial dimension is smaller than the other two. Included in this third class of WECs is the planar WaveRoller™ surge-type WEC described by U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2006/0150626. Another substantially planar, surge-type WEC is the Oyster™ WEC described by U.S. Pat. No. 7,834,474.
Japanese Pat. No. 57165675 describes a sea-anchor-like device designed to capture tidal currents.
The Pelton water turbine can extract energy from the momentum of a moving fluid. The Pelton turbine comprises a number of cups mounted on a rotating wheel. The wheel rotates so that the concave cups recede from an incident fluid stream. The Pelton turbine does not operate when submerged.
One challenge provided by earlier work is the exploitation of concavity in maximizing fluid drag on the WEC device.
In the known systems discussed above, only the device described in Japanese Pat. No. 57165675 utilizes a concave structure. Because this device is designed to capture the energy of tidal flows, the frequency with which the device reverses direction is lower than that required of WECs. The use in this device of a single surface whose curvature reverses with each oscillation can render the device impractical in the higher-frequency wave-energy-capture context.
Other challenges addressed by the present application include device protection in violent weather, tracking of tidal depth variations, tracking of changes in wave direction, and the capture of heave (vertical) energy by a surge-type WEC.
The present application discloses several components that can be organized into groups, specifically, those relating to the geometry of the WEC device, and those relating to the mooring of the WEC device through a power-take-off (PTO) subsystem and energy storage. Geometry deals with structures that guide water around a corner so as to maximize the momentum transferred from the water to the WEC structure that results in the force on the WEC structure which, coupled with the motion of the WEC structure, produces power. WEC structures can be classified according their geometry, that is, point, line, and surface. All three geometrical types are amenable to concave implementations.
Mooring deals with the exploitation of the force-motion product captured from the waves, and with the cost benefits flowing from a specific type of mooring.
Mooring options also affect deployment issues. WEC structures moored to floating platforms can readily track tidal depth variations as well as variations in wave direction. Platform mooring also facilitates maintenance and offers a way of protecting the WEC system in violent weather.
The power captured from waves is typically irregular, and can be stored and/or smoothed to be made more useful. One mode of energy storage, hydrogen production by electrolysis, can eliminate such irregularity, and can simplify the transmission of captured wave power to shore and beyond.
In accordance with one aspect, a wave-energy-conversion (WEC) device includes a WEC structure having a substantially stationary base, and at least one concave surface. The WEC structure is at least partially immersed in a body of water, and oscillates with the local water motion comprising wave action near the surface of the body of water. The amplitude of the oscillation of the WEC structure is reduced relative to that of the wave action by a restraining force provided by a power-takeoff (PTO) subsystem that combines the restraining force with the motion of the WEC structure relative to the substantially stationary base to produce power in a convenient form. The concave surface of the WEC structure faces and opposes the local water motion, thereby tending to reverse the local water motion.
Other features, functions, and aspects of the invention will be evident from the Drawings and/or the Detailed Description of the Invention that follow.
The invention will be more fully understood with reference to the following Detailed Description of the Invention in conjunction with the drawings of which:
a is a diagram illustrating a spherical (convex) buoy used to capture the heave (vertical) component of wave motion;
b is a diagram illustrating a concave version of buoy shown in
a is a diagram illustrating a point- or line-like WEC structure comprising a triangular cluster of three individually concave structures;
b is a diagram illustrating a cross section of the triangular cluster shown in
a is a diagram illustrating a vertical cross section of concave paddle;
b is a diagram illustrating a horizontal cross section of concave paddle;
a, 6b, and 6c are diagrams illustrating momentum exchange with the paddles of surge-type WECs;
a is a diagram illustrating a concave line-like WEC structure;
b is a diagram illustrating an increase in buoy area with a keel;
c is a diagram illustrating a three-point mooring;
d is a diagram illustrating a buoy with multiple keels;
e is a diagram illustrating a hinge-attached keel;
f is a diagram illustrating a buoy with a paneled keel;
a is a diagram illustrating a floating pulley, power-take-off (PTO) subsystem;
b is a diagram illustrating a pulley on a piston, PTO subsystem;
c is a diagram illustrating a pulley on a structure, PTO subsystem;
a is a diagram illustrating a concave, surge-type WEC system employing a hinged-based, PTO subsystem;
b is a diagram illustrating a concave, surge-type WEC system employing a cable-based, PTO subsystem; and
The disclosures of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/315,158 filed Mar. 18, 2010 entitled SEA ANCHOR WAVE ENERGY CONVERTER, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/405,287 filed Oct. 21, 2010 entitled PELTONSURGEWEC, are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
We recall from the summary above that the present application involves issues of geometry and mooring. We consider issues of geometry first.
Wave-energy-conversion (WEC) devices can be grouped according to their geometry: point, line, or surface. Point systems are characterized by comparable spatial extent in all three dimensions. The sphere is a point structure, but it is also convex.
Line-like WEC structures are characterized by one spatial dimension being larger than the other two. The cylinder is the prototype and it too is convex. The long dimension of a line-like WEC structure can be aligned in three possible directions, of which we focus on two: perpendicular to the water surface, and parallel to both the water surface and the wave crests.
Surface-like WEC structures are characterized by one spatial dimension that is smaller than the other two. A planar sheet is the prototype.
a illustrates a spherical WEC structure. Such WECs are called point absorbers.
Note that diagrams like
a shows a triangular cluster of three individually concave substructures 411, each of which can be thought of as the half-pipe shown in the bottom row of
The WEC structure in
The WEC structure of
Surfaces terminate at edges, and edges provide escape routes for the fluid motion we are trying to harness. Escape is reduced by making the wave-facing surfaces of the surface-like surgeWEC structure concave.
a is a vertical cross section of a concave surgeWEC paddle, and
a also introduces the keel 512, a surface-like WEC structure component attached to the concave buoy 324. The keel serves to increase the surface area exposed to the wave action. While the buoy used to illustrate the keel in
a, 6b, and 6c show the interplay of escape routes and momentum transfer near the top (horizontal) edge of a surgeWEC paddle 602. As discussed above in reference to
a shows a surgeWEC system like that described in U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2006/0150626, whose paddle 602 does not reach the water surface, thereby giving the water flow 601 an escape route over the top of the paddle.
b shows a surgeWEC system like that described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,834,474, whose paddle extends to and through the water surface, thereby creating freeboard.
c shows the additional momentum-transfer benefit of guiding the flow into the reverse direction using a smooth concave guiding surface 603.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,834,474 discloses surgeWEC top-edge terminations possessing “T”, “Y”, and “L” shapes. These are terminations of a bottom-hinged paddle possessing freeboard, in contrast to the floating structures considered here, and therefore do not have a fixed relationship to the water surface. The terminations are above the freeboard and are removed from the water surface for most of the paddle stroke. They are designed to reduce overtopping, the escape of the flow over the top of the paddle, as the paddle top rotates toward the water surface near the ends of its stroke. That is, because the paddle rotates about a sea-bed hinge, any freeboard it possesses in the middle of its stroke decreases as the paddle top rotates toward the water surface. The paddle-top terminations are thus not designed to and do not produce the flow reversal we seek.
A WEC structure oscillates with the oscillatory motion of the local water, but with smaller amplitude. The power we capture from the wave motion is the product of the WEC motion and the force on the WEC structure by the PTO subsystem. The power-take-off (PTO) subsystem of a WEC converts this force-motion product into a more useful form of power, such as electricity. A cable connecting the moving WEC structure (the bobbing point absorber or the swaying surgeWEC paddle, for example) to an electric generator is a common PTO configuration. (The cable is wound around a drum axially attached to a generator which produces electric power when the WEC structure moves away from the drum and generator. U.S. Pat. No. 4,208,877 illustrates this configuration.) A floating WEC structure can be moored to the sea bed diagonally, thereby capturing the power contained in both the vertical (heave) and horizontal (surge) wave-induced motion of the WEC structure. U.S. Pat. No. 4,208,877 describes such a configuration.
a also illustrates the replacement of the submerged cylindrical buoy described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,208,877 by a floating concave line-like structure.
The additional cable-based PTO 711-712 shown in
d illustrates the introduction of multiple hulls. Configurations like that in
One way to exploit the tension-only WEC structure is to attach the keel portion 512 of the structure to the buoy portion 324 by a hinge 751. This enables the WEC structure to more smoothly guide the vertical fluid flow to the concave top portion which guides the flow to the reverse direction, completing the flow reversal.
f shows that the keel can be subdivided into multiple panels 761 to render the flow guide even smoother.
Hinges in the keel and multiple keel panels can be taken a step further by constructing the keel from flexible fabric. A WEC keel requires great tensile strength such as that provided by the materials used in industrial conveyor belts or automobile tires. The reduction of construction costs offered by fabric keels can be substantial.
As mentioned, the power captured is the product of the force on the WEC structure and its motion. Both are vector quantities, and a cable captures only the component of both the force and the motion in the direction of the cable. Thus, a greater fraction of the power captured by the WEC structure can be converted if two substantially perpendicular cables are used to capture the circular (or elliptical) local motion of the water. In
One aspect of this “horizontal PTO” idea is to maintain the pulley near the height of the top of the WEC structure 324.
b shows that the size of the buoy 815 can be reduced by supplementing the buoyancy of the buoy 815 with direct piston support 821 from the sea bed. In the configuration shown in
Hinged surgeWEC systems such as the WaveRoller™ and the Oyster™ systems have been developed.
a and 9b differ in the type of PTO they use to convert the power captured by the WEC structure. The system shown in
A WEC structure can be PTO moored to the sea bed or to a platform. We can refer to either as the “base”. U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2010/0111609 describes a platform-mounted surgeWEC system, and European Pat. Appl. No. 2128430 illustrates a platform mounted point absorber.
One distinction between sea-bed and platform WEC mounting is tide tracking. Tidal variations in depth are comparable to and often greater than wave amplitudes and wave amplitudes set the scale for the amplitude of the local water oscillatory motion underlying wave action. In this regard, platform mounting offers several advantages, starting with tide tracking and including wave-direction tracking, the facilitation of maintenance, and a natural way of protecting the WEC system in violent weather. The depth at which the system is positioned relative to the water surface may be controlled by floatation, that is, ballast tanks may be filled and evacuated as done with marine vessels, submarines in particular. Platforms can also be rotated so as to maintain a desired orientation with regard to wind and wave direction. A platform-mounted system is depicted in
Because individual point-like WEC structures expose relatively small areas to the wave action, such systems can be deployed in replicated arrays. An advantage of such array deployment is the opportunity it provides for averaging and thereby smoothing (reducing the fluctuations) in the power produced by individual point absorbers. A second benefit of replicated arrays is the opportunity to share resources, such as PTO moorings.
A surgeWEC system, that is, a WEC that extends to an arbitrary length in the direction of the wave crest (usually parallel to the shoreline), is typically not a candidate for replication. If a surgeWEC system removes a substantial fraction the energy carried by an incident wave, there is generally little motivation to position surgeWEC systems in series, that is, one behind another. SurgeWEC systems can, however, be deployed end-to-end, forming a chain.
The power produced by the WEC PTO subsystem often fluctuates inconveniently. Thus, it can be useful to have WEC output power consumed by a process that stores the energy for later use while being substantially unaffected by such fluctuations. Hydrogen production by electrolysis is an example of such a process. Energy stored as hydrogen for later consumption also facilitates the transport of WEC power output to shore and beyond.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that modifications to and variations of the above-described systems and methods may be made without departing from the inventive concepts disclosed herein. Accordingly, the disclosure should not be viewed as limited except as by the scope and spirit of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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61315158 | Mar 2010 | US | national |
61405287 | Oct 2010 | US | national |
This application claims benefit of the priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/315,158 filed Mar. 18, 2010 entitled SEA ANCHOR WAVE ENERGY CONVERTER, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/405,287 filed Oct. 21, 2010 entitled PELTONSURGEWEC.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/28679 | 3/16/2011 | WO | 00 | 9/17/2012 |