On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board

In this paper, we investigate the design of an integrated system consisting of two non-rigidly connected bodies: A floating buoy and an emerged offshore structure. When waves excite the buoy to oscillate, the relative motion between the two bodies are converted to useful energy through a spring damp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jinming Wu, Zhonghua Ni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2865
id doaj-6bbd36e1f8e5489f85efc5f58588d796
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6bbd36e1f8e5489f85efc5f58588d7962020-11-25T03:01:06ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-04-01122865286510.3390/su12072865On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on BoardJinming Wu0Zhonghua Ni1School of Mechanical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, ChinaSchool of Mechanical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, ChinaIn this paper, we investigate the design of an integrated system consisting of two non-rigidly connected bodies: A floating buoy and an emerged offshore structure. When waves excite the buoy to oscillate, the relative motion between the two bodies are converted to useful energy through a spring damper system, resulting in wave energy being absorbed. The parameter to design includes the mass and underwater shape of the buoy. The spring stiffness of the power take-off (PTO) system is constrained to be non-negative with the concerns of complexity in implementation and system stability. Results suggest that a larger mass of the buoy is advantageous due to smaller optimal spring stiffness and damping coefficient of the PTO system, more absorbed wave power, and less motion amplitude of the two bodies. A favorable underwater shape of the buoy is characterized by large diameter to draft ratio, with the section profile preferring a circle or square rather than an equilateral triangle. Investigations on the designed buoy in irregular waves show that the integrated system presents its peak power absorption within the common range of energy period, and the motion amplitude of the offshore structure is larger than the wave amplitude in a certain range of sea states.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2865integrated systemfloating buoyoffshore structurewave energy converternon-negative spring stiffness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jinming Wu
Zhonghua Ni
spellingShingle Jinming Wu
Zhonghua Ni
On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
Sustainability
integrated system
floating buoy
offshore structure
wave energy converter
non-negative spring stiffness
author_facet Jinming Wu
Zhonghua Ni
author_sort Jinming Wu
title On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
title_short On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
title_full On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
title_fullStr On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
title_full_unstemmed On the Design of an Integrated System for Wave Energy Conversion Purpose with the Reaction Mass on Board
title_sort on the design of an integrated system for wave energy conversion purpose with the reaction mass on board
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-04-01
description In this paper, we investigate the design of an integrated system consisting of two non-rigidly connected bodies: A floating buoy and an emerged offshore structure. When waves excite the buoy to oscillate, the relative motion between the two bodies are converted to useful energy through a spring damper system, resulting in wave energy being absorbed. The parameter to design includes the mass and underwater shape of the buoy. The spring stiffness of the power take-off (PTO) system is constrained to be non-negative with the concerns of complexity in implementation and system stability. Results suggest that a larger mass of the buoy is advantageous due to smaller optimal spring stiffness and damping coefficient of the PTO system, more absorbed wave power, and less motion amplitude of the two bodies. A favorable underwater shape of the buoy is characterized by large diameter to draft ratio, with the section profile preferring a circle or square rather than an equilateral triangle. Investigations on the designed buoy in irregular waves show that the integrated system presents its peak power absorption within the common range of energy period, and the motion amplitude of the offshore structure is larger than the wave amplitude in a certain range of sea states.
topic integrated system
floating buoy
offshore structure
wave energy converter
non-negative spring stiffness
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2865
work_keys_str_mv AT jinmingwu onthedesignofanintegratedsystemforwaveenergyconversionpurposewiththereactionmassonboard
AT zhonghuani onthedesignofanintegratedsystemforwaveenergyconversionpurposewiththereactionmassonboard
_version_ 1724695039941017600