The commercial development and deployment of wave energy converters (WECs) will require arranging these
devices in groups known as ‘arrays’, similar to the deployment other large-scale renewable energy systems, such
as wind farms, or tidal arrays. This study explores a novel control co-design (CCD) strategy for heterogeneous
arrays of point absorber-type WECs, focusing on the simultaneous optimisation of buoy hull geometry and
array layout to harness multi-directional wind and swell wave energy. The WEC array operates under a newly
developed global centralised control algorithm, which supports displacement constraints, but allows for the
assessment of array performance in the frequency domain. This approach has the potential to significantly
speed up the numerical solution of the control co-design optimisation problem, compared to more traditional
time-domain-based methods. The array optimisation problem is solved using a global optimisation method.
The performance function aims to optimise the positive network effect of interactions between devices in the
array, while simultaneously considering cost issues, quantified by device sizes. The investigation identifies
optimal device geometry and array layouts for clusters of three, four, and five WECs, in two different wave
climates: Irish and Portuguese coasts, allowing the sensitivity of optimal solutions to different wave climates
to be studied
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.