Publication | Open Access
Laboratory testing the Anaconda
46
Citations
15
References
2011
Year
HydroelasticityEngineeringMechanical EngineeringMarine EngineeringWave MotionMechanicsClinical ChemistryLaboratory MedicineWave EnergyExternal Water WavesLaboratory MethodOcean Internal WaveMarine HydrodynamicsEnergy HarvestingLaboratory AutomationBiologyPressurized Compound RubberOcean EngineeringCivil EngineeringWave Energy ConverterSymbiosisMedicine
Laboratory measurements of the performance of the Anaconda are presented, a wave energy converter comprising a submerged water-filled distensible tube aligned with the incident waves. Experiments were carried out at a scale of around 1:25 with a 250 mm diameter and 7 m long tube, constructed of rubber and fabric, terminating in a linear power take-off of adjustable impedance. The paper presents some basic theory that leads to predictions of distensibility and bulge wave speed in a pressurized compound rubber and fabric tube, including the effects of inelastic sectors in the circumference, longitudinal tension and the surrounding fluid. Results are shown to agree closely with measurements in still water. The theory is developed further to provide a model for the propagation of bulges and power conversion in the Anaconda. In the presence of external water waves, the theory identifies three distinct internal wave components and provides theoretical estimates of power capture. For the first time, these and other predictions of the behaviour of the Anaconda, a device unlike almost all other marine systems, are shown to be in remarkably close agreement with measurements.
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