Abstract

This work revisits the theoretical limits of one degree-of-freedom wave energy converters (WECs). This work considers the floating sphere used in the OES Task 10 WEC modeling and verification effort for analysis. Analytical equations are derived to determine bounds on displacement amplitude, time-averaged power (TAP), and power-take-off (PTO) force. A unique result found shows that the TAP absorbed by a WEC can be defined solely by the inertial properties and radiation hydrodynamic coefficients. In addition, a unique expression for the PTO force was derived that provides lower and upper bounds when resistive control is used to maximize power generation. For complex conjugate control, this same expression only provides a lower bound, as there is theoretically no upper bound. These bounds assist in comparing the performance of the floating sphere if it were to extract energy using surge or heave motion. The analysis shows because of differences in hydrodynamic coefficients for each oscillating mode, there are different frequency ranges that provide better power capture efficiency. The influence of a motion constraint on TAP while utilizing a nonideal power take-off is examined and found to reduce the losses associated with bidirectional energy flow. The expression to calculate TAP with a nonideal PTO is modified by the electrical conversion efficiency and the ratio of the PTO spring and damping coefficients. The PTO spring and damping coefficients were separated in the expression, allowing for limits to be set on the PTO coefficients to ensure net power generation.

1 Introduction

Over the last 45 years since the publication of Salter’s foundational paper on wave power [1], research and development in wave energy technologies have pushed forward in hopes of bringing the industry closer to commercialization. In the last two decades, the worldwide marine and hydrokinetic industry has seen growth in investment and research awards; however, it can be argued that the industry as a whole remains in the early stages of technology development. To date, there are still no commercially grid-connected wave energy converters (WECs) installed in the United States, with only a few megawatts installed worldwide [2]. A significant challenge with WEC technology is the conversion of slow, irregular, and high-force oscillatory motion that must be converted to an output power signal with acceptable quality for a utility grid network [3].

The marine energy industry continues to explore a great number of designs ranging in scale from novel concept to oceangoing constructions. Therefore, development funds can be spread thin across a diverse research portfolio indicating a structured innovation approach maybe required to facilitate a convergence in WEC design and operation [4]. Although there are many different forms, WECs can generally be divided into three predominant classifications: (1) attenuator, most notably the Pelamis [5] and most recently Mocean’s Blue Horizon [6], (2) point absorber, most notably Wavebob [7], Ocean Power Technologies PowerBuoy [8], while more recently Corpower Ocean [9], and (3) terminator, most notably the Wave Dragon [10]. Within these classifications, WEC devices can be further defined based on the mode of motion used to capture energy, such as point absorbers, oscillating wave surge converters [11], oscillating water columns [12], overtopping devices, and bulge wave devices [3].

Of all of the WEC concepts, the most common and well-studied design is the point absorber, which typically has a narrow-banded response; therefore, control is generally required to improve energy capture [13]. Often point absorbers are designed such that their resonance frequency aligns with the dominant wave frequency of the most frequently occurring sea states. This condition amplifies the WEC response to maximize power capture; however, the device response can drop dramatically when moving to higher or lower wave frequencies. As such, one of the unique aspects of optimal control for WECs [14] is the use of the power-take-off (PTO) to induce an artificial resonance by incorporating a spring term in the controller feedback law resulting in the reversal of energy flow requiring a PTO unit that can act as both a generator and a motor. Several studies have explored the optimal control of WECs when prohibiting the PTO from injecting energy back into the WEC oscillation. These strategies are commonly known as declutching [15] when the WEC oscillates at a higher frequency than its resonance frequency and clutching [16] when the WEC oscillates at a lower frequency than its resonance frequency. These control strategies are highly nonlinear that either disconnect the PTO to speed up the WEC or lock motion through the PTO to slow down the WEC to move the WEC velocity in phase with the wave excitation force. The topic of WEC control remains an area of significant interest in the marine energy industry with recent popular adoption of state-constrained optimization techniques that can handle nonlinear constraints often found in WEC designs [1719].

Often the point absorber is assumed to oscillate in heave with the wave elevation profile given the common buoy-like and bottom-referenced device concepts [20]. However, as discussed in Ref. [21], the hydrodynamic radiation and diffraction forces between surging, similar for pitch, and heaving devices have different frequency responses that influence the effective energy capture bandwidth. For example, it has been shown that the theoretical upper limit on power captured by a surging or pitching device is twice that of a heaving device because of the asymmetric wave radiation pattern [22].

This paper builds off the work of Ref. [21] by extending the performance metric comparison to the required displacement amplitude and PTO force, and considering nonideal conversion efficiency. After introducing the floating WEC used in this analysis, the author provides a discussion of the differences in the hydrodynamic and radiation coefficients. This is followed by deriving the upper bound on the amplitude of displacement for each mode of motion, highlighting how constraints such as the PTO stroke length can reduce the energy capture potential. Next, we discuss the influence of the hydrodynamic radiation coefficients on maximum power capture using complex conjugate [13] or resistive PTO control. This is followed by deriving the upper and lower bounds of the PTO force requirement, which depends on the control strategy implemented. Finally, we provide a discussion on how improvements in maximum power capture can be degraded by nonunity PTO efficiency, which can be aggravated based on the mode of oscillation.

2 Floating Body Description

For this study, we selected the floating sphere used for the Ocean Energy Systems Task 10 Wave Energy Converter modeling and verification effort [23]. The floating sphere has a radius of 5.0 m, and its origin is located on the mean water surface at the center of the spherical body, with a summary of the model parameters provided in Table 1. The mass of a floating half-submerged sphere is given by
(1)
where ρ is the fluid density and r is the sphere radius. The linearized heave hydrostatic spring coefficient is modeled by the following expression:
(2)
where Awp is the water plane area. A free floating body will not have a hydrostatic restoring coefficient in surge; however, for station keeping an external spring, such as mooring or PTO control strategies, it will need to be coupled to the surge degree of motion. For this analysis, we assumed that the floating sphere could be connected to a fixed reference frame by an external spring with a magnitude equal to the heave hydrostatic restoring coefficient (i.e., C11 = C33).
Table 1

General properties of the floating sphere [23]

ParametersVariableAssigned values
Radius of spherer5 m
Center of gravitycg0.0, 0.0, −2.0 m
Center of buoyancycb0.0, 0.0, −1.875 m
Mass of spherem261.8 × 103 kg
Water depthmInfinite m
Water densityρ1000 kg/m3
ParametersVariableAssigned values
Radius of spherer5 m
Center of gravitycg0.0, 0.0, −2.0 m
Center of buoyancycb0.0, 0.0, −1.875 m
Mass of spherem261.8 × 103 kg
Water depthmInfinite m
Water densityρ1000 kg/m3

The hydrodynamic coefficients used in the analysis to estimate the displacement and power absorption of the sphere were obtained from WAMIT [24] and are plotted in Fig. 1. As shown in Fig. 1(a), for heave oscillation the radiation wave damping peaks at a lower wave frequency than surge and the same for the added mass; however, for surge, the wave damping peak corresponds with a greater drop from the added mass peak than heave, which will be highlighted in a later section. For the wave-excitation force shown in Fig. 1(a), in heave the force is maximum at the lowest frequencies and continues to decrease as the wave frequency increases. While in surge, the wave-excitation force tends to zero at the upper and lower frequencies while peaking in the intermediate frequency regime. As will be discussed in Sec. 4.2, as the WEC motion becomes more heavily constrained, the peak in power capture centers on the peak in the wave-excitation force rather than at the resonant frequency.

Fig. 1
Nondimensional hydrodynamic surge and heave radiation and wave-excitation force coefficients for the floating sphere: (a) radiation added mass μjj and wave damping λjj and (b) wave-exciting force magnitude |Xj| and phase ϕj
Fig. 1
Nondimensional hydrodynamic surge and heave radiation and wave-excitation force coefficients for the floating sphere: (a) radiation added mass μjj and wave damping λjj and (b) wave-exciting force magnitude |Xj| and phase ϕj
Close modal

3 Regular Wave Analysis

In floating body dynamics, it is common practice to understand the frequency response of the device by analyzing the response under sinusoidal waves, in which the wave elevation profile is modeled by
(3)
where A is the wave amplitude, k is the wave number, η is the wave elevation, and ω is the wave angular frequency. The mechanical force from the PTO system will be modeled by
(4)
where Cg is the PTO-restoring coefficient, λg is the PTO-damping coefficient, and ξj is the j degree-of-freedom complex amplitude of motion where j = 1 and j = 3 corresponds to surge and heave motion, respectively,
The frequency-domain expressions for the hydrostatic, radiation, diffraction, and PTO forces can be inserted into the one degree-of-freedom equation of motion to derive the displacement and velocity response amplitude operators of the floating sphere:
(5)
(6)
where Xj is the wave-exciting force per wave amplitude, Cjj is the linear spring coefficient in the jth degree-of-freedom, Mjj is the mass or moment of inertia in the jth degree-of-freedom, μjj is the radiation added moment of inertia or added mass or in the jth degree-of-freedom, and λjj is the radiation wave damping in the jth degree-of-freedom.
The magnitude of Eq. (5) will be taken to obtain motion amplitude bounds:
(7)
where Vg is the wave group velocity, and the Haskind expression [25] has been substituted in the second line of Eq. (7). Ξ is a measure of the ratio between the inertial and resistive forces that arise from WEC oscillation and is defined by
(8)
Because the bracketed term in Eq. (8) is squared, Ξ will be bounded between 1 and ∞; see Fig. 2. The lower bound will be obtained when the spring forces cancel the acceleration forces, and if no phase control is implemented, Cg = 0 occurs only at the resonance frequency of the WEC. Furthermore, it has also been assumed that the PTO linear damping coefficient has been selected, such that λg=λjjΞ. The reason behind this selection will be described in the following section. If deep water is assumed, khπ, then Eq. (7) can be simplified to the following form:
(9)
where λw is the wavelength and h is the water depth. Because Eq. (8) is bounded between [1, ∞], the term, Π, in Eq. (9) is bounded between [0,1/2], see Fig. 3. The upper bound on the motion response is set by the following expression:
(10)
Fig. 2
The values of Ξ, given by Eq. (8), which is a measure of the ratio between inertial/spring and resistive forces that are generated because of WEC oscillations. The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Fig. 2
The values of Ξ, given by Eq. (8), which is a measure of the ratio between inertial/spring and resistive forces that are generated because of WEC oscillations. The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Close modal
Fig. 3
The values of Π, defined in Eq. (9). The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Fig. 3
The values of Π, defined in Eq. (9). The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Close modal

Therefore, the maximum displacement amplitude, in deep water, is relative to the wavelength squared and inversely proportional to the wave-exciting force/torque.

If shallow water is assumed, kh → 0, then Eq. (7) can be simplified to the following form:
(11)
The maximum motion displacement amplitude in shallow water is proportional to the water depth, and inversely proportional to the wave-exciting force and to the square of the wave angular frequency.

When comparing the velocity amplitudes between surge and heave in deep water for maximum power capture, see Fig. 4; for wave frequencies below the resonance frequency, surge outpaces heave. Above the resonance frequency, the surge oscillation requires a smaller amplitude compared to heave that is consistent with Eq. (10), as the wave-excitation force is one variable that differs between the two oscillation modes. Referring back to Fig. 1(b), one can see that the surge wave-excitation force is larger than heave for higher frequencies and will reduce the required displacement amplitude.

Fig. 4
Nondimensional surge and heave velocity response amplitude operators for the floating sphere. The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Fig. 4
Nondimensional surge and heave velocity response amplitude operators for the floating sphere. The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, and the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Close modal

4 Time-Averaged Power Absorption

The maximum time-averaged power absorbed by a WEC oscillating in a single degree-of-freedom [22] can be modeled by the following:
(12)
Therefore, it is beneficial to minimize the variable Ξ ratio, which can be described by the following inequality:
(13)
As described earlier in the floating body description section, given that the hydrostatic restoring coefficient is static, then the power capture potential of the WEC will be greater when the radiation added mass is minimized and the wave damping is maximized. Thus, it may be possible to adjust the shape of a WEC at each wave frequency to meet the inequality by controlling the radiation added mass and wave damping coefficients.
The previously mentioned expressions require unconstrained motion, and the PTO linear damping coefficient takes the following value:
(14)
Equation (12) can be simplified further by substituting the Haskind expression as follows:
(15)
As shown by Eq. (15), the WEC time-averaged power can be defined solely by the inertial properties and the radiation hydrodynamic coefficients. The expression for the time-averaged power now requires fewer hydrodynamic coefficients to evaluate the maximum power potential of a given WEC. The power absorption of a floating body can be estimated from the value of χ, which is plotted in Fig. 5. In addition, the theoretical maximum power absorption limit for an axisymmetric device, which is oscillating in pitch or surge, is twice that of the heaving case [14,22].
Fig. 5
The values of χ, defined in Eq. (15). The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Fig. 5
The values of χ, defined in Eq. (15). The subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control when setting Cg = 0.
Close modal

The maximum power absorption from Eq. (15) is obtained when Ξj=1, which occurs when the inertial and spring forces cancel. This condition is naturally met when the wave frequency matches the resonance frequency of the floating body [22]. As the wave frequency moves above or below the resonance frequency, an external positive or negative PTO spring, equal to Cg = −[Cjjω2(Mjj + μjj)], must be added to the WEC system to obtain maximum power absorption and is often referred to as complex conjugate control [14]. Incorporating this controllable spring remains a current research interest in the wave energy field, with several efforts implementing the spring either mechanically or through control strategies. Because of the increased complexity related to incorporating a controllable spring, many developers have relied on resistive control by adjusting the PTO-damping coefficient, λg, which is equal to Eq. (14), when setting Cg = 0.

The power absorption obtained from complex conjugate and resistive control is equal at the floating body resonance frequency; however, it is of interest to develop a ratio between these two control strategies at other wave frequencies. The ratio can be calculated by taking the ratio of Eq. (15) when setting Ξj=1 and with Ξj when Cg = 0, which provides the following expression:
(16)
where the subscript m refers to maximum power absorption, whereas the subscript r refers to the maximum power absorption under resistive control, and Ξrj refers to setting Cg = 0 in Eq. (8). Equation (16) has been plotted in Fig. 6 and is unique in that it remains dependent only on the spring, inertial, and radiation coefficients. Furthermore, as shown in Fig. 6, when above the resonance frequencies, the ratio between complex conjugate and resistive control strategies is much lower for surge than in heave, whereas below resonance surge will quickly outpace heave. This performance can be attributed to the natural hydrodynamic bandwidth, which helps tune the power capture, as discussed in Ref. [21].
Fig. 6
Ratio of power absorption between complex conjugate and resistive control for the floating sphere.
Fig. 6
Ratio of power absorption between complex conjugate and resistive control for the floating sphere.
Close modal

4.1 Incident Wave Power and Capture Width.

The efficiency of a given WEC can be calculated once the wave power contained within a propagating wave is known. The wave-power-per-unit width, Pw, is estimated from the following expression:
(17)
where T is the wave period. The capture width is normally defined as the ratio of the time-averaged WEC absorbed to the wave power and given as follows:
(18)
Equations (15) and (17) can be substituted into Eq. (18) to calculate the capture width of a given WEC:
(19)
(20)
The maximum capture width is related to the wavelength, which theoretically implies that a WEC can absorb more incident wave power than contained within the WEC length that is perpendicular to the wave crest (see Fig. 7); however, it is well known that the required amplitudes of motion may not be physically achieved [22]. The results from Eq. (19) are limited to axisymmetric devices, but if the device characteristic length is small relative to the wavelength, the WEC could be assumed to be a point absorber with antisymmetrical wave radiation patterns [26].
Fig. 7
The capture width of complex conjugate and resistive control nondimensionalized by the diameter of the floating sphere
Fig. 7
The capture width of complex conjugate and resistive control nondimensionalized by the diameter of the floating sphere
Close modal

4.2 Influence of Motion Constraints on Maximum Absorbed Power.

The theoretical maximum WEC power absorption, given by Eq. (12), requires unconstrained motion and is known to require unrealistic amplitudes of motion. As observed from Eq. (10), the required displacement amplitude will quickly increase in longer wave periods [22], where the wavelength can be several hundred meters. Under sinusoidal motion, the maximum power absorption when considering a maximum motion amplitude, was explored in Ref. [27], which provides the following equation:
(21)
where |ξj|max is the displacement amplitude limit, and δ is constrained-to-optimal velocity ratio given by
(22)
To match the power output described earlier, for δj < 1, the required linear PTO coefficients are given by
(23)
(24)
If Eq. (21), with δj < 1, was substituted into the numerator of Eq. (18), the capture efficiency would be inversely proportional to the wave amplitude. For unrestricted motion, the capture efficiency will be the same regardless of wave amplitude, whereas for strongly restricted motion, the capture efficiency will decrease as the wave amplitude increases and become from a hydrodynamic perspective less efficient. In taking the limit, δ → 0, the absorbed power is optimized when the wave-exciting force/torque is greatest instead of at the resonance frequency [28].

4.3 Power-Take-Off Power Quality.

The PTO instantaneous power [29] can be modeled by the following equation:
(25)
where Z = λgiCg/ω, ν is the phase of Z and ϕ is the phase of iωξj. As observed in the second term in Eq. (25), if Cg ≠ 0, the instantaneous power will oscillate between positive and negative, resulting in an energy flow reversal. The instantaneous PTO power peaks (P+j) and the input reactive power (Pj) are given by
(26)
The peak-to-average power ratio can be obtained by dividing Eq. (26) by the time-averaged power, as shown in Eq. (12), leading to the following expression:
(27)
Therefore, the PTO peak-to-average power ratio is defined only by the PTO coefficients and can be tuned to stay within the power capacity of the PTO. As observed from Eq. (27), there will be no bidirectional energy flow when Cg = 0, preventing any negative instantaneous power. This condition is often referred to as resistive control, and the peak-to-average power ratio will be 2. The input power requirement, Cg ≠ 0, is not required at the floating body resonance; however, moving away from resonance, the peak-to-average power ratio can increase dramatically, resulting in large energy flux reversals.
If bidirectional energy flow is allowed and the PTO force coefficients, Cg and λg, are selected such that the phase and amplitude conditions required for optimum power extraction are achieved [14]—refer to Eq. (23) and Eq. (24)—then the peak-to-average power ratio can be modeled by the following expression:
(28)
Equation (28) requires unconstrained motion and has been plotted in Fig. 8, but can be adapted to account for motion constraints, similar to Eq. (21). If the expression for the linear PTO-damping coefficient, when δj < 1, is inserted into Eq. (27), the following expression is obtained:
(29)
where, as the wave amplitude increases, all terms are constant except for A and δj. However, as A increases, δj decreases, which provides a nonlinear increase in the denominator under the square root. As the linear PTO-damping coefficient is increased to meet a given displacement constraint, the peak-to-average power ratio will be reduced, and the reduction is nonlinearly proportional to the increase in wave amplitude.
Fig. 8
The floating sphere peak-to-average power ratio for complex conjugate and resistive control
Fig. 8
The floating sphere peak-to-average power ratio for complex conjugate and resistive control
Close modal

5 Power-Take-Off Force

For the WEC system to capture energy, a PTO unit must be included to provide a resistive force that acts against WEC motion. The complex PTO force amplitude, αj, in the frequency domain can be modeled as
(30)
where αj is the complex PTO force/torque amplitude depending on the degree-of-freedom used to extract the incident wave power, and Zuj is the PTO force-to-velocity transfer function. In order to estimate the magnitude of the force amplitude required by the PTO, we take the absolute value of Eq. (30) and divide it by ωλjj:
(31)
(32)
If bidirectional energy flow is allowed, then the optimum phase and amplitude conditions required for maximum power extraction can be met [14], and the complex PTO force/torque amplitude can be simplified as the following expression:
(33)
The second term under the square root in Eq. (33) will always be greater than or equal to 0, resulting in the square root having a lower bound of 1 and an unconstrained upper bound. The lower bound is obtained when the wave frequency meets the floating body resonance frequency. Therefore, the expected PTO force under the optimum conditions for power extraction will always be greater than half of the wave-exciting force.
If bidirectional energy flow is prohibited, Cg = 0, and the PTO-damping coefficient is selected to optimize power absorption (refer to Eq. (8), the required PTO force will be expressed as follows:
(34)
For resistive control, the PTO force amplitude will vary between 1/2 and 2/2 of the wave-exciting force; see Fig. 9. Equations (33) and (34) converge to the same value when the resonant and wave frequencies match, as the conditions for optimum power extraction are met by both control schemes.
Fig. 9
The nondimensional power-take-off force amplitude for complex conjugate and resistive control of the floating sphere
Fig. 9
The nondimensional power-take-off force amplitude for complex conjugate and resistive control of the floating sphere
Close modal
The phase and magnitude relationship of the PTO force-to-velocity transfer function can be expressed as follows:
(35)
whereas under complex conjugate control, the phase angle will take the following form:
(36)
The phase angle between the PTO force and WEC velocity is bounded between π/2 (ω → 0) and 3π/2 (ω → ∞) and crosses π at the resonance frequency of the WEC, as shown in Fig. 10. As shown in Fig. 11, the phase angle of the optimal PTO force-to-velocity transfer function deviates from π, which corresponds to resistive control. The linear trace between the WEC velocity-to-PTO force for resistive control is no longer optimum and becomes more oblong as the ratio of the imaginary-to-real component of Zuj. At the limits of Zuj=±π/2, the control command has the largest force demand when the WEC is moving at the lowest speed. Requiring high forces at low speeds can lead to issues with conversion efficiency, as the PTO systems may not be designed for optimum performance in this operating regime. Therefore, the gains over resistive control when applying complex conjugate control can be degraded with potential negative energy capture [30]. As observed in Fig. 10, at frequencies above resonance the phase angle for the heave oscillation mode decays more quickly to 3π/2 than surge. Therefore, even when off resonance the surge oscillation mode requires less of a control action to tune the response of the WEC for optimum power capture, as long as the PTO is able to generate the required force.
Fig. 10
The magnitude and phase of the PTO force-to-velocity transfer function for complex conjugate control
Fig. 10
The magnitude and phase of the PTO force-to-velocity transfer function for complex conjugate control
Close modal
Fig. 11
Plot of the changing relationship between velocity and force with changing phase angle
Fig. 11
Plot of the changing relationship between velocity and force with changing phase angle
Close modal

6 Nonideal Power-Take-Off Efficiency

Complex conjugate control requires energy to flow back and forth from the oscillating body to an energy storage system, which has different losses dependent on the direction of flow of the energy flux if the PTO has a mechanical-to-electrical efficiency less than unity. If a PTO unit is selected, with a time-invariant mechanical-to-electrical efficiency defined by ηe, the resulting PTO output time-averaged power [30,31] is given by
(37)
(38)
(39)
where PO is the time-averaged power, after accounting for the efficiency steps in the power conversion chain, which can be sent to the grid. The peak-to-average power ratio for a nonideal PTO, PAηe±, can be modeled from the following equation:
(40)
The change in the e* and g* terms in Eq. (37), with respect to the coefficient ratio of the PTO, are shown in Fig. 12. It can be observed from Eq. (39) that the variable, G, is bounded between [0, ∞] and that G* is bounded between [0, π/2]. As observed in Fig. 12, the variable, e* ≥ 0, while g* ≤ 0, resulting in the bracketed term in Eq. (37) being bounded by [1, − ∞]. When the value in brackets falls below 0, there is a net flow of energy to the device rather than the grid. Inclusion of the mechanical-to-electrical efficiency can greatly reduce the time-averaged output power if care is not taken in limiting G. A new ratio of the time-averaged output power, when considering nonideal PTO efficiency between the two control strategies, can be calculated by taking the ratio of Eq. (37) when setting Ξj=1 and with Ξj when Cg = 0, leading to the following expression:
(41)
As e* and g* are independent and can be separated in Eq. (37), it is possible to set maximum limits on G to ensure net flow of power to the grid (tabulated in Table 2). Table 2 shows that, as the PTO mechanical-to-electrical efficiency is reduced, the maximum G value for a net power output is reduced at a much greater rate. Equation (41) only requires the radiation coefficients, and the natural hydrodynamic bandwidth of the device will play a role in tempering the negative effects of PTO efficiency. Therefore, we can expect the surge oscillation mode to be less sensitive than heave when considering PTO efficiency.
Fig. 12
The effect on e* and g* for a range of ηe and G values
Fig. 12
The effect on e* and g* for a range of ηe and G values
Close modal
Table 2

Limits on G as a function of ηe

ηee*Ge*g* = −1/4Ge*g* = −1/2Ge*g* = −1
0.701.041.822.734.36
0.800.562.604.127.01
0.900.234.718.1414.89
0.950.118.7316.0430.60
ηee*Ge*g* = −1/4Ge*g* = −1/2Ge*g* = −1
0.701.041.822.734.36
0.800.562.604.127.01
0.900.234.718.1414.89
0.950.118.7316.0430.60

7 Conclusions

This paper explores the theoretical one degree-of-freedom limits for a demonstrative floating spherical WEC. The dynamic response of the WEC considered both surge and heave modes of oscillation, as the differences in the hydrodynamic coefficients for different frequency ranges may lead to improved power capture efficiency. This follows the concept of a natural hydrodynamic bandwidth that has been shown to improve tuning of the WEC system for maximum power capture for the surge mode of motion compared to heave; however, this work does not suggest that heaving WECs are poorly designed, only that additional consideration should be taken when designing the floating body. As the work in this paper shows, the benefits of proper hydrodynamic tuning can significantly reduce the control strategy burden to maximize power capture, which can be degraded further when considering the PTO efficiency. Furthermore, to the best of our knowledge, a unique analytical expression for the PTO force amplitude was derived that provides upper and lower bounds that depend only on the wave-exciting force. Such bounds allow for rapid design iteration, as they eliminate the need to complete higher-fidelity simulations and can be calculated using frequency-domain techniques. Furthermore, analytical bounds have been placed on the ratio of the PTO spring and damping coefficients, when considering PTO efficiency, to ensure a net power output that is also strongly influenced by the natural hydrodynamic bandwidth. The final decision in selecting the WEC mode of oscillation will be completed based on the designer vision and must also consider other external factors, such as station keeping, extreme loading, power-take-off selection, and maintenance windows.

Acknowledgment

This work was authored by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, operated by Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under Contract No. DE-AC36-08GO28308. Funding provided by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Water Power Technologies Office. The views expressed in the article do not necessarily represent the views of the DOE or the U.S. Government.

Conflict of Interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

Data Availability Statement

The authors attest that all data for this study are included in the paper.

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