Numerical hydrodynamic analysis of an offshore stationary–floating oscillating water column–wave energy converter using CFD

Offshore oscillating water columns (OWC) represent one of the most promising forms of wave energy converters. The hydrodynamic performance of such converters heavily depends on their interactions with ocean waves; therefore, understanding these interactions is essential. In this paper, a fully nonli...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ahmed Elhanafi, Alan Fleming, Gregor Macfarlane, Zhi Leong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-01-01
Series:International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
Subjects:
OWC
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2092678216304290
Description
Summary:Offshore oscillating water columns (OWC) represent one of the most promising forms of wave energy converters. The hydrodynamic performance of such converters heavily depends on their interactions with ocean waves; therefore, understanding these interactions is essential. In this paper, a fully nonlinear 2D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model based on RANS equations and VOF surface capturing scheme is implemented to carry out wave energy balance analyses for an offshore OWC. The numerical model is well validated against published physical measurements including; chamber differential air pressure, chamber water level oscillation and vertical velocity, overall wave energy extraction efficiency, reflected and transmitted waves, velocity and vorticity fields (PIV measurements). Following the successful validation work, an extensive campaign of numerical tests is performed to quantify the relevance of three design parameters, namely incoming wavelength, wave height and turbine damping to the device hydrodynamic performance and wave energy conversion process. All of the three investigated parameters show important effects on the wave–pneumatic energy conversion chain. In addition, the flow field around the chamber's front wall indicates areas of energy losses by stronger vortices generation than the rear wall.
ISSN:2092-6782