Pseudo-nonlinear hydrodynamic coefficients for modelling point absorber wave energy converters

Date

2018

Authors

Schubert, B.
Meng, F.
Sergiienko, N.
Robertson, W.
Cazzolato, B.
Ghayesh, M.
Rafiee, A.
Ding, B.
Arjomandi, M.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Conference paper

Citation

Proceedings of the 4th Asian Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (AWTEC 2018), 2018, pp.1-10

Statement of Responsibility

Benjamin W. Schubert, Fantai Meng, Nataliia Y. Sergiienko, Will Robertson, Benjamin S. Cazzolato, Mergen H. Ghayesh, Ashkan Rafiee, Boyin Ding, Maziar Arjomandi

Conference Name

4th Asian Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (AWTEC) (9 Sep 2018 - 13 Sep 2018 : Taipei, Taiwan)

Abstract

This study presents dynamic simulation results of two point absorber wave energy converters comparing between linear, pseudo-nonlinear, and CFD models. When modelling wave energy converters, linear assumptions are commonly used to simplify calculations. One such assumption is that the hydrody- namic parameters do not change with pose. This study proposes the inclusion of position and orientation dependence in force estimation, specifically the hydrodynamic terms. A comparison between linear, the proposed pseudo-nonlinear, and CFD models show the effect of the linear assumption for cylindrical and spherical submerged buoys in three degrees of freedom, subject to regular waves. For the case of strong nonlinear hydrodynamic coupling between degrees of freedom, the linear and pseudo- nonlinear models are compared with published literature trends. Accounting for pose dependence of hydrodynamic forces, drag forces, and infinite frequency inertial effects showed trends closer to CFD results but with generally higher motion amplitudes. Significant differences in results for the cylinder are due to the presence of near-surface nonlinear effects that are not captured using linear potential flow solvers. Furthermore, a second order effect was observed in the results, suggesting the proposed method may be well suited to model sufficiently submerged buoys.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright status unknown

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record