Evaluation of the annual electricity production of a hybrid breakwater-integrated wave energy converter

Ocean waves constitute an abundant source of clean and predictable energy, with the potential to partly replace carbon intensive energy sources. At present, several technologies to convert wave energy into electricity are being developed, but those suitable for integration into port breakwaters pres...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor principal: Tomás Cabral (author)
Outros Autores: Daniel Clemente (author), Paulo Rosa Santos (author), Francisco Taveira Pinto (author), Tiago Morais (author), Henrique Cestaro (author)
Formato: article
Idioma:eng
Publicado em: 2020
Assuntos:
Texto completo:https://hdl.handle.net/10216/129593
País:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/129593
Descrição
Resumo:Ocean waves constitute an abundant source of clean and predictable energy, with the potential to partly replace carbon intensive energy sources. At present, several technologies to convert wave energy into electricity are being developed, but those suitable for integration into port breakwaters present additional advantages. This paper presents a novel concept that combines two well-known wave energy conversion principles, an oscillating water column and a multi-reservoir overtopping system. This hybrid concept was designed to be integrated in rubble-mound breakwaters, having as case study Leixoes' northern breakwater, Portugal. The performance and efficiency of the single components were assessed separately as well as that of the hybrid module as a whole, to demonstrate the advantages of their combination into a single unit. Furthermore, the annual energy production was estimated for a 20 m wide hybrid module considering the local metocean conditions. Results showed that overall efficiency amounted to circa 44.4%, the wave-to-wire efficiency to 27.3% and the annual electricity production was estimated at 35 MWh/m. Considering that 240 m of the reference breakwater are used, the developed hybrid module could provide approximately 50% of the electricity consumption of the Port of Leixoes, which demonstrates the potential and interest of the developed technology.