Pelamis extracts energy from the leverage exerted on hydraulic pistons as the device articulates up and down as waves pass along the device. Image: Courtesy of Ocean Power Delivery An impression of the 400 ton wave energy device deployed on the seabed off the Portuguese coast. The central OWC component is obvious in the centre. Image: Courtesy of AWS. Limpet is the grid connected shore based wave energy converter built into a natural coastal recess on the Scottish Island of Islay. This concrete Oscillating Water Column device uses the ambidextrous Well’s Turbine to generate on both parts of the swell cycle. Wave energy devices based on Limpet are now being considered as components for breakwaters and other sea walls. Image: Courtesy of Wavegen The strength of using turbines which provide continuous spin regardless of airflow direction has spawned a number of stand alone OWC wave energy converter designed. This one shows potential arms to act as a concentrating funnel. Image: Courtesy of Energetec.
  Wave Power Jobs Navigation:

 

Wave Power Introduction
Wave Power is one of our largest renewable energy sources, but until very recently we have lacked the technologies to harness such raw energy. There are now thousands of patents describing potential wave energy devices, but very few have been translated into working prototypes, and even less in to devices with the survivability needed. However, as the feed in tariffs for energy derived from marine sources are increased by certain governments, many new designs are sure to leave the drawing board or CAD file - only time will tell which ones will form the backbone of the future industry.

Wave Energy Devices
Today’s technologies can be separated into various categories and often share ideas that have been tried before in other designs. Since the Japanese experiments with floating Wave Energy converters in the 1970s, OWC wave energy converters have been installed on exposed cliffs and coastlines in both Norway and Scotland. Alternative designs that sit on the seabed are also under trial.

Oscillating Water Columns (OWC)
Oscillating Water Column concepts capture wave energy by harnessing the movement of air that is caused to oscillate by water surging up and down below. The shore-based installations such as Wavegen’s grid tied “Limpet” and a number of similar experimental concrete converters built on exposed coasts of India, Japan and the Azores, have evolved the technology, paving the way for the commercial models being developed now. There is also a healthy level of work being undertaken using OWC technology either on anchored buoys or various devices designed to sit on the seabed.

Tapchan & low-head hydro turbines
The use of natural and/or artificial tapered channels to provide increased wave height has proven fruitful for increasing outputs for shore based OWCs. They also offer potential to raise and temporarily capture waves which can then drain back down through low head hydro turbines. A number of devices which use some form of Tapchan are being developed.

Levers & Hydraulic Generators
These are an entire lineage of wave power converters based on leverage. The strengths and weaknesses of each design that has been tested (and often destroyed) have informed the next generation. OPD's floating converter, Pelamis owes some of its engineering DNA to that laid down by Professor Stephen Salter in various devices including his famous “Duck”.

 

Next Page:    Tidal Energy

 

Further Reading

 

External Links:

 

Other Links:

 


   Marine Energy
   Introduction
 Wave Energy
   Tidal Energy
   OTEC
   Ocean Currents
   Next Section:
   Micro Renewables
 

JOB AREAS:

Wave Energy Concepts
OWC
Hydraulic
Tapchan
Stream

Engineering
Turbines
Generators
Control Systems
Prototype testing
CAD modelling
Patent writing

Marine
Mooring Systems
Grid Connections
Off-shore technologies
Off-shore logistics
Marine Ecology
Sea Bed Leasing

Business Development
CEO & Senior Finance
International Sales
Project Management

 

 

 

 

2002 - © Green Energy Jobs