Integrated study of triboelectric nanogenerator for ocean wave energy harvesting: Performance assessment in realistic sea conditions

Ocean related activities are often supported by offshore equipment with particular power demands. These are usually deployed at remote locations and have limited space, thus small energy harvesting technologies, such as photovoltaic panels or wind turbines, are used to power their instruments. Howev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cátia Rodrigues (author)
Other Authors: Miguel Ramos (author), R. Esteves (author), J. Correia (author), Daniel Clemente (author), Francisco Gonçalves (author), Nuno Mathias (author), Mariany Gomes (author), João Silva (author), Cândido Duarte (author), Tiago Morais (author), Paulo Rosa Santos (author), Francisco Taveira Pinto (author), André M. Pereira (author), João Ventura (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10216/133888
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/133888
Description
Summary:Ocean related activities are often supported by offshore equipment with particular power demands. These are usually deployed at remote locations and have limited space, thus small energy harvesting technologies, such as photovoltaic panels or wind turbines, are used to power their instruments. However, the inherent energy sources are intermittent and have lower density and predictability than an alternative source: wave energy. Here, we propose and critically assess triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs) as a promising technology for integration into wave buoys. Three TENGs based on rolling-spheres were developed and their performance compared in both a "dry" bench testing system under rotating motions, and in a large-scale wave basin under realistic sea-states installed within a scaled navigation buoy. Both experiments show that the electrical outputs of these TENGs increase with decreasing wave periods and increasing wave amplitudes. However, the wave basin tests clearly demonstrated a significant dependency of the electrical outputs on the pitch degree of freedom and the need to take into account the full dynamics of the buoy, and not only that of TENGs, when subjected to the excitations of waves. This work opens new horizons and strategies to apply TENGs in marine applications, considering realistic hydrodynamic behaviors of floating bodies.