111 research outputs found
Integrated Numerical Modelling System for Extreme Wave Events at the Wave Hub Site
This paper examines an extreme wave event which occurred during a storm at the Wave Hub site in 2012. The extreme wave of 9.57 m height was identified from a time series of the heave data collected by an Oceanor Seawatch Mini II Buoy deployed at the site. An energy density spectrum was derived from this time series and then used to drive a physical model, which represents the extreme wave at 1:20 scale in Plymouth University’s new COAST Lab. The NewWave technique was used to define the input to the physical model. The experiment is reproduced in a numerical wave tank using the fully nonlinear CFD library OpenFOAM® and the wave generation toolbox waves2Foam. Results are evaluated, and issues regarding the predictions of a numerical model that is driven by the NewWave input signal are discussed. This study sets the basis for further research in coupling field data, physical modelling and numerical modelling in a more efficient and balanced way. This will lead to the new approach of composite modelling that will be implemented in future work
Review of consenting processes for ocean energy in selected European Union Member States
Abstract Consenting is still generally regarded as a non-technological barrier to the progress of the marine renewable energy industry, caused by the complexity of consenting processes and the lack of dedicated legal frameworks. Existing consenting systems for ocean energy projects tend to be based on procedures designed for other sectors and are seen as inappropriate for the specific needs of ocean energy. Licensing procedures are also viewed by developers as time-consuming because regulators see ocean energy as a new activity with unknown or uncertain effects and consequently often apply strong interpretation of the precautionary principle. Consenting processes for ocean energy are, nevertheless, evolving throughout Europe, driven by national and European policies and incentives on renewables, changing legal and administrative frameworks to facilitate development and more integrated marine governance. This review compares the consenting processes for ocean energy in different European countries, focusing on aspects thought to hamper operation of the process. It shows that different systems of governance across the EU Member States have resulted in diversity in the design of consenting processes, though common features can also be identified. This evidence-based review enables suggestions for streamlining consenting processes for wave energy.</p
Reports of interactive meetings with policy makers
The Streamlining of Ocean Wave Farms Impact Assessment (SOWFIA) Project (IEE/09/809/ SI2.558291) is an EU Intelligent Energy Europe (IEE) funded project that draws together ten partners, across eight European countries, who are actively involved with planned wave farm test centres. The SOWFIA project aims to achieve the sharing and consolidation of pan-European experience of consenting processes and environmental and socio-economic impact assessment (IA) best practices for offshore wave energy conversion developments. Studies of wave farm demonstration projects in each of the collaborating EU nations are contributing to the findings. The study sites comprise a wide range of device technologies, environmental settings and stakeholder interests. Through project workshops, meetings, on-going communication and networking amongst project partners, ideas and experiences relating to IA and policy are being shared, and co-ordinated studies addressing key questions for wave energy development are being carried out. The overall goal of the SOWFIA project is to provide recommendations for approval process streamlining and European-wide streamlining of IA processes, thereby helping to remove legal, environmental and socio-economic barriers to the development of offshore power generation from waves. By utilising the findings from technology-specific monitoring at multiple sites, SOWFIA will accelerate knowledge transfer and promote European-wide expertise on environmental and socio-economic impact assessments of wave energy projects. In this way, the development of the future, commercial phase of offshore wave energy installations will benefit from the lessons learned from existing smaller-scale developments
Study and development of diagnostic systems to characterise the extraction region in SPIDER
SPIDER, an RF-driven negative ion source in the Neutral Beam Test Facility (NBTF), serves as the prototype for ITER's neutral beam injector (NBI). It is composed of 8 drivers powered by 4 RF generators, aiming to accelerate 50 A of negative hydrogen ions to 100 KeV with a beam uniformity target of 10%. The experiment, launched in 2018, tested negative ion production using caesium. Results match those of similar facilities, but SPIDER faces challenges due to its size, multiple drivers, and non-uniform plasma expansion. These issues impact beam uniformity, preventing the machine from reaching expected performance. To address this, SPIDER initiated a significant shutdown at the end of 2021 for improvements. One the most important aspects studied during the first experimental campaign is source uniformity, addressed both in terms of plasma and of caesium distribution. The latter is particularly relevant since its quality is directly related to the beam uniformity and divergence. To have more insight about these issues, monitoring the plasma properties in the extraction region is crucial, hence in the present contribution, the design and development of two new diagnostic systems are described: a movable Langmuir probe and a Retarding Field Energy Analyser (RFEA). The first can provide a vertical scan of the main plasma parameters close to the plasma grid. The spatial resolution would improve with respect to the already installed set of fixed Langmuir probes embedded in the grid system, and the newly installed diagnostic could interact with other sensors to produce complementary measurements (namely, electron photo-detachment). The latter, instead, allows the monitoring of the positive ion energy distribution: positive ions, in fact, can be precursors of the negative ones produced at the caesiated surface, but also influence the energy of negative ion and their extraction probability and thus collecting information about their energy distribution allows inferring details about the extracted negative ion beam. The two diagnostics are designed focusing on the experimental constraint of integrating the diagnostics in a harsh and complex environment such as SPIDER plasma: a preliminary study of the placement inside the source is carried out, then the electrode of the movable probe and the RFEA sensor are sized according to the spatial and energy resolution requested by the system
Hydroelectromechanical modelling of a piezoelectric wave energy converter
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and physical sciences and the definitive published version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2016.0715.We investigate the hydro-electromechanical coupled dynamics of a piezoelectric wave energy converter. The converter is made of a flexible bimorph plate, clamped at its ends and forced to motion by incident ocean surface waves. The piezoceramic layers
are connected in series and transform the elastic motion of the plate into useful electricity by means of the piezoelectric effect. By using a distributedparameter
analytical approach, we couple the linear
piezoelectric constitutive equations for the plate with the potential-flow equations for the surface water waves. The resulting system of governing partial differential equations yields a new hydroelectromechanical
dispersion relation, whose complex roots are determined with a numerical approach. The
effect of the piezoelectric coupling in the hydro-elastic domain generates a system of short- and long-crested weakly damped progressive waves travelling along the plate. We show that the short-crested flexural wave component gives a dominant contribution to the generated power. We determine the hydroelectromechanical
resonant periods of the device, at which the power output is significant
Engineering Study of Tidal Stream Renewable Energy Generation and Visualization: Issues of Process Modelling and Implementation
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