Abstract
Ocean wave energy converters face significant challenges including cost-effectiveness, minimizing maintenance requirements, and withstanding extreme conditions. However, by utilizing smart materials, these converters could overcome these challenges. Such energy harvesters could use dielectric elastomer generators to convert ocean wave energy into electricity through their dynamic straining. Conversely, by applying electricity to these generators, they become actuators - dielectric elastomer actuators - thereby enabling them to alter their stiffness and adapt to the ever-changing ocean energy environments. Such active adaptation could enhance the converter's ability to: reach resonance with ocean waves and protect itself from dangerous waves. This study utilizes numerical analyses through the COMSOL software framework to evaluate the potential energy that could be harvested by a conceptual ocean wave energy converter based upon dielectric elastomer generators/actuators. The converter is composed of an external hull (that is a hollow cylinder), an inertial mass (that is a hollow cylinder and concentric with the hull), and 'spokes' - made of dielectric elastomer generators/actuators - that connect the hull to the inertial mass. Results of the numerical analyses include those outcomes arising from the conceptual converter being simulated via a sinusoidal motion analogous to ocean waves. That motion, therefore, causes relative motion between the converter's hull and inertial mass thereby dynamically stretching the corresponding connecting elastomers. The stretching of the elastomers enables them to 'gain elastic strain energy' and is, therefore, considered to be the theoretical limit of possible electrical energy conversion for the dielectric elastomer generator/actuator spokes. Additionally, the elastomer material properties of the spokes were altered to simulate the actuation of those same elastomers; with overall strain energy being subsequently investigated. Ultimately this is a preliminary study exploring the ability of such smart materials - electricity-generating and self-actuating elastomers - to actively adapt an ocean wave energy converter's structure to address and overcome the aforementioned challenges.
Original language | American English |
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Number of pages | 10 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2024 |
Event | ASME 2024 Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems - Atlanta, Georgia Duration: 9 Sep 2024 → 11 Sep 2024 |
Conference
Conference | ASME 2024 Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems |
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City | Atlanta, Georgia |
Period | 9/09/24 → 11/09/24 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/CP-5700-92123
Keywords
- active materials
- adaptive systems
- DEEC-Tec
- distributed embedded energy conversion technologies
- energy harvesting
- marine renewable energy
- multifunctional materials
- ocean wave energy converter
- simulation
- smart materials