Wave and Tidal Power
Transcription
Wave and Tidal Power
Wave and Tidal Power By Paul David Shrader, 2005 Wave Power I • Wave power is • harnessed much like a “reverse wavegenerator” in a swimming pool. Waves enter a chamber, which forces air out of the chamber, which turns a turbine. Wave Power in Action • Wavegen, a Scottish • • • company, produces generators that work off of wave power. Limpet (Land Installed Marine Powered Energy Transformer) is Wavegen’s main innovation. Wave Power Possibilities Problem- Waves aren’t dependable! Wave Power in Action II • Ocean Power Delivery is another company striving to take advantage of wave power. • OPD uses long floating tubes (each the size of about 5 railroad cars) which bend when waves hit them, driving generators. • An OPD “tube” is called a Pelamis. • Interactive Pelamis Model Wave Power in Action III Tidal Power • Tidal power relies on the moon’s • • • • • effect on oceans: tides. Only a few sites in full use at the moment: White Sea in Russia (1969) & Rance River, France (1967), and several in Norway Together they have a total capacity of producing less than 250 megawatts of energy. Bay of Funday on the US-Canadian border could potentially produce about 30,000 MW of energy, but it would probably destroy a crucial estuary that fosters much of the fowl and fishes in the area. Ebb, flood, two-way, two-basin generation Problem of moon cycle (24.8 hours) vs. earth cycle (24 hours), causing high-energy times to change. Other Tidal Energy Generation • In Norway, turbines similar to • In Norway, turbines similar to • • wind power generators have been installed underwater. Called “The Blue Concept”, it is a move toward more renewable energy sources. Underwater turbines that are cheap and relatively predictable generate energy. Norway's normal annual production from hydropower is 115 TWh. Other Tidal (cont.) • “In Norway and EU the estimated potential of • this energy source is 600 GWh and 48 TWh, respectively. In the world at large the potential tidal power exceeds 450 TWh, most of it located in Asia and America. If the potential stream energy of rivers is included, these numbers become even higher.” Streams move at roughly 2m/s (turbines won’t interfere with animal life at such low speeds) Works Referenced • http://www.wavegen.co.uk/what_we_offer_limp • • • • et.htm http://www.e-tidevannsenergi.com/index.htm http://egj.lib.uidaho.edu/egj09/youngqu1.html http://www.oceanpd.com/Links/videos.html http://www.darvill.clara.net/altenerg/wave.htm
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