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Chapter Six - Oscillating-Body Wave-Energy Converters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2020

Johannes Falnes
Affiliation:
NTNU, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim
Adi Kurniawan
Affiliation:
University of Western Australia, Albany
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Summary

Referring to a simple illustration, a verbal explanation is given by the essential, but perhaps paradoxical, statement that to absorb wave energy from a wave by means of an oscillating system, it is required that the system radiates a wave which interferes destructively with the incident wave. Then various mathematical relations are derived concerning the conditions for an oscillating body to remove energy from an incident wave. The mathematical conditions for wave-power absorption may be illustrated as a paraboloid-shaped 'island' on an infinite complex-plane 'ocean' surface. The top of this 'island' corresponds to maximum absorbed power. An additional matter is the optimum control of a wave-energy converter (WEC) body. Thus far, the WEC body's shape and oscillation mode have been taken into account, but not its physical size. The latter is an important parameter related to the cost of the WEC, when the Budal upper bound is explained and discussed. Another important phenomenon, related to the Keulegan–Carpenter number, is discussed, in relation to an example of a WEC body. In a final section of the chapter, a WEC body, oscillating in several modes of motion, is discussed.

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Ocean Waves and Oscillating Systems
Linear Interactions Including Wave-Energy Extraction
, pp. 204 - 241
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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