To come.
Excerpt from Ocean Wave Energy Conversion by Michael McCormick
|
Refraction Focusing—"DAM-ATOLL"
|
In 1946 Robert S. Arthur presented a paper in which he desribed the refraction of water waves by idealized islands having circular bottom contours. By the proper choice of bottom profile, Arthur (1946) showed that the power from that portion of the wave front directly influenced by the island is focused on the center of the island, as illustrated in Figure 4.39a. He studied the focusing phenomenon by analyzing the changes in the directions of the wave orthogonal or rays as the wave refracts on the island.
Using the results of the Arthur (1946) study, Wirt (1976) of the Lockheed California Company showed that the most suitable island profile for wave energy conversion is the one that yields logarithmic spiral orthogonals, that is, those described by
|
r = r0exp[ ( &theta - &theta0 ) cot ( &theta0 ) ] (4.124)
|
where r0 is the radius of the first shoaling contour and &theta0 the angle of the nonrefracting orthogonal. Referring to Figure 4.39b, the profile of the island is given by the equation
|
d1 = λ0 ∕ 2&pi ( r ∕ r0 )tanh-1( r ∕ r0) (4.125)
|
The waves refract in the pattern shown in Figure 4.39a until they break. The broken waves then become surges and are guided tinto a vertical shaft by vanes, as illustrated in Figure 4.40. The entrance of the guide vanes are positioned just before the breaking point of the waves. The vanes are designed to give the surge a tangential velocity as the water enters the veritcal shaft, as illustrated in Figure 4.40. The water then descends as a water column with a rotational motion and thus acts as a fluid flywheel. At the bottom of the shaft is a vertical axis turbine, which is illustrated in the cross-sectional sketch in Figure 4.41. The turbine, in turn, drives an electrical generator. After [exiting] this turbine, the water then passes through a radial diffuser and returns to the ocean.
The system described by Wirt (1976), called the "DAM-ATOLL," is designed to adjust its vertical position as the mean water level changes with the tides. This is accomplished by giving the system a relatively small amount of positive boyancy and by using an adjustable mooring, as illustrated in Figure 4.41. The island, or atoll, can be compliant walled and water filled. This design feature allows for ease in both transportation to the site and positioning. After the system is placed in the water, it floats as a result of flotation chambers located in the rigid central portion of the system. The flexible chambered walls of the atoll are then filled with water tht is pumped in at a high pressure to maintain the desired profile [given by the equation (4.125)]. These design features should keep the costs of the DAM-ATOLL system to a minimum. A sketch of an operational system is presented in Figure 4.42.
|
h > &lambda0 ∕ 2 = 31.3 ft ( 9.55 m )
|
Therefore the incident waves are deep water waves. The atoll is assumed to have a diameter of 200 ft (61.0 m) at its first refracting contour; thus
|
r0 = 200 ft (61.0 m)
d0 = 31.3 ft (9.55 m)
|
The wave power available to the DAM-ATOLL is obtained from equation (4.112), where b in that equation [is] replaced by 2r0. Thus in deep water, where the group velocity is
|
(next)
Click on any of the following topics that may catch your eye
Worst Pun Of The Year Every Year
Best And Most Concise Description Of Dam-Atoll
The damndest thing that ever came out of an acoustics lab
Fermat's Principle
The Patent for Dam-Atoll is now in the public domain
The Name Dam-Atoll Tells How It Extracts Ocean Wave Energy
Dam-Atoll An Amalgam Of the Concepts Dam And Atoll
Dams And Kinetic, Potential, and Mechanical Energy
River As Kinetic Energy
Kinetic Energy Transformed To Potential Energy
Potential Energy Transformed Back To Kinetic Energy
Kinetic Energy Turned Into Mechanical Energy
An Atoll Bends And Refracts The Approaching Wave
Wave Velocity
Wave Refraction
When the submerged atoll is dome-shaped, it refracts the wave path to its center
The exact shape of the atoll's dome is critical
the atoll acts as a kind of lense concentrating the wave energy
A Wave's Potential Energy Gets Changed To Kinetic Energy By An Atoll
A wave is nothing but energy
Waves And Potential And Kinetic Energy
A deep-water ocean wave is always half potential and half kinetic energy
Wave is all kinetic energy when it breaks on the center of the atoll
Changing A Wave's Kinetic Energy To Mechanical Energy By Means Of A Vortex
Vortex
Vortex is a fluid flywheel
Dam-Atoll, Vortex, Guide Vanes
This in sum is how Dam-Atoll works
Smoothing out the succession of wave pulses
Advantages Over The Other Ocean Wave Energy Extraction Devices
Dam-Atoll has only one moving part
Thus Dam-Atoll loses no energy in monkey motion
Monkey motion
Competing Ocean Wave Energy Extraction Devices are monkey motion machines
Energy Efficiency
Diffuser Important To Energy Efficiency
Mathematically Optimal Shape Of Dome Crucial To Energy Efficiency
A Future So Bright For Ocean Systems You Will Need Sunglasses
The Patent for Dam-Atoll is now in the public domain
The Opportunity
Leslie Wirt is available for lectures
Leslie Wirt offers consulting services
Video of working scale model of Dam-Atoll
Dam-Atoll Patent
Michael McCormick's Comments On Dam-Atoll
John Isaac's Comments On Dam-Atoll
Links To Books, Articles, And Web Sites Mentioning Dam-Atoll
Excerpts From Scattering And Absorption Of Surface Waves By Arthur's Island
Future Prospects For Dam-Atoll
Dam-Atoll Humor
Dam-Atoll_History
About the inventor of Dam-Atoll, Leslie S. Wirt
Contact Leslie Wirt
|
Next: John Isaac's Commentary On Dam-Atoll
|