System for producing energy through the action of waves
09944353 ยท 2018-04-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05B2250/13
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B35/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05B2240/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B39/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05B2250/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B2001/123
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63B2035/4466
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E10/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F03B13/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05B2240/93
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03B13/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B39/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F03B13/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63B35/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A hull that is part of a system for producing energy through the action of waves. The hull's shape, dimension and orientation make the system less costly and increase the energy provided by the system.
Claims
1. A system for producing energy through the action of waves comprising, a hull having a bow and stern, wherein at least a portion of the hull has a cross-section such that a static waterplane of the hull increases or decreases as a draft of the hull decreases or increases, respectively; at least one system to produce electricity from the action of waves and resulting pitching movement of the hull, wherein at least a portion of the at least one system is secured to the hull; and a system to tune the pitching of the hull relative to hydraulic forces of the waves to increase energy generated by the system to produce electricity, wherein: in response to the frequency of the wave decreasing and a wave period increasing, the system to tune is configured to cause the draft of the hull to increase and the static waterplane of the hull to decrease; and in response to the frequency of the wave increasing and the wave period decreasing, the system to tune is configured to cause the draft of the hull to decrease and the static waterplane of the hull to increase.
2. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, wherein the hull has an elliptical cross-section having a long axis and a short axis wherein the long axis is vertical and the short axis is horizontal.
3. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, wherein the system to tune the hull comprises a controller and one or more sensors configured output a signal representative of the wave height.
4. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, wherein the hull has a generally diamond shaped cross-section.
5. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern and the length of the hull is between 200 and 280 feet.
6. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern that is between one quarter and three quarters of a length of the wave frequency.
7. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 1, further comprising: a bow external modular ballast; a stern external modular ballast; and an external bow ballast hanger and an external stern ballast hanger disposed at the bow and the stern for retaining the bow and the stern external modular ballast, respectively.
8. A system for producing energy through the action of waves comprising, a hull having a bow and stern, wherein at least a portion of the hull has a cross-section such that a static waterplane of the hull increases or decreases as a draft of the hull decreases or increases, respectively; a generator secured to the hull, the generator to produce electricity from a pitching movement of the hull induced by the action of waves; a controller to monitor wave frequency and to tune the pitching of the hull relative to hydraulic forces of the waves to increase electricity generated by the generator, wherein: in response to the frequency of the wave decreasing and a wave period increasing, the controller is configured to cause the draft of the hull to increase such that a static waterplane of the hull decreases; and in response to the frequency of the wave increasing and the wave period decreasing, the controller is configured to cause the draft of the hull to decrease such that the static waterplane of the hull increases.
9. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 8, wherein the hull has an elliptical cross-section having a long axis and a short axis wherein the long axis is vertical and the short axis is horizontal.
10. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 8, wherein the hull has a generally diamond shaped cross-section.
11. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 8, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern and the length of the hull is between 200 and 280 feet.
12. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 8, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern that is between one quarter and three quarters of a length of the wave frequency.
13. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 8, further comprising an external bow ballast hanger and an external stern ballast hanger disposed at the bow and the stern for retaining a bow and a stern external modular ballast, respectively.
14. A system for producing energy through the action of waves comprising, a hull having a bow and stern, wherein a top portion of the hull has a cross-section that decreases as a draft of the hull increases; an electrical generator secured to the hull to produce electricity from a pitching movement of the hull induced by the action of waves; a controller to monitor wave frequency and to tune the pitching of the hull relative to hydraulic forces of the waves to increase electricity generated by the electrical generator, wherein: in response to the frequency of the wave decreasing and a wave period increasing, the controller is configured to cause the draft of the hull to increase such that a static waterplane of the hull decreases; and in response to the frequency of the wave increasing and the wave period decreasing, the controller is configured to cause the draft of the hull to decrease such that the static waterplane of the hull increases.
15. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 14, wherein the hull has an elliptical cross-section having a long axis and a short axis wherein the long axis is vertical and the short axis is horizontal.
16. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 14, wherein the hull has a generally diamond shaped cross-section.
17. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 14, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern and the length of the hull is between 200 and 280 feet.
18. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 14, wherein the hull has a length extending between the bow and the stern that is between one quarter and three quarters of a length of the wave frequency.
19. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 14, further comprising an external bow ballast hanger and an external stern ballast hanger disposed at the bow and the stern for retaining a bow and a stern external modular ballast, respectively.
20. The system for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 19, further comprising the bow and the stern external modular ballast.
21. A method for producing energy through the action of waves on a hull, the method comprising: adjusting the pitching motion of the hull by adjusting an amount of ballast of the hull to adjust a draft of the hull based on, at least in part, a frequency of the waves, at least a portion of the hull having a cross-section such that a static waterplane of the hull increases or decreases as a draft of the hull decreases or increases, respectively, wherein adjusting the pitching motion of the hull by adjusting the amount of ballast of the hull comprises: increasing the draft of the hull and decreasing the static waterplane of the hull in response to the frequency of the wave decreasing; and decreasing the draft of the hull and increasing the static waterplane of the hull in response to the frequency of the wave increasing; and generating electricity from the action of waves and resulting pitching movement of the hull.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein the hull has a length that is between one quarter and three quarters of a wave length.
23. The method of claim 21, further comprising adjusting an amount of ballast to alter a moment of inertia of the hull and to tune a phase of the hull to operate in phase with the frequency of the waves.
24. The method for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 21, wherein the hull has an elliptical cross-section having a long axis and a short axis wherein the long axis is vertical and the short axis is horizontal.
25. The method for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 21, wherein the hull has a generally diamond shaped cross-section.
26. The method for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 21, wherein the hull has a length of between 200 and 280 feet.
27. The method for producing energy through the action of waves of claim 21, wherein generating electricity from the action of waves and resulting movement of the hull comprises: moving a second movable mass that is carried by relative to a first movable mass to create kinetic energy as a result of varying its position relative to the first movable mass, wherein the first movable mass is the hull; and converting the kinetic energy of the second mass moving relative to the first mass into electricity.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of embodiments, taken together with the drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(26) The present invention is a hull constituting part of a system for producing energy through the action of waves. The other parts of the system may be parts of the system described in U.S. Patent Publication US-2009-0160191-A1 or any other system for producing energy through the action of waves.
(27) A preferred embodiment of the present invention is designed to reduce manufacturing costs. Ocean waves can be divided into two groups based on their frequencies: one group contains waves with frequencies centered around 9 sec. (medium frequency) and one group contains waves with frequencies centered around 12 sec. (long frequency). As shown in
(28) As shown in
(29) In addition, this elliptical shape is optimized for displacement and water plane to be self-tuning to multiple wave frequencies ranging from 7 sec. to 15 sec. Other cross-section geometries, such as a diamond shape, as shown in
(30) The draft of the ellipse determines the static waterplane of the hull. As the draft increases, the waterline rides higher on the ellipse 572, which then has a smaller waterplane, which softens the hull. As the draft decreases and the waterline rides closer to the geometric horizontal centerline of the ellipse 571, the waterplane of the hull increases, which stiffens the hull.
(31) In addition, as the moment of inertia of a hull increases, the hull can be tuned to longer and longer wave frequencies. By adding mass externally at the bow or stern of the hull, the moment of inertia of the hull increases without adding additional volume to the hull. The relocation of the additional mass is much less expensive than adding volume to the hull to accommodate more mass needed to create a similar moment of inertia if the mass were added within the hull.
(32) The addition or subtraction of additional mass, located externally at the bow and stern of the hull, also increases or decreases the displacement of the hull, which, in turn, increases or decreases the moment of inertia of the hull, without adding volume to the hull, which, in turn, tunes the phase of the hull to longer or shorter wave periods, respectively.
(33) In another preferred embodiment, as shown in
(34) A typical hull 210, as shown in
(35) In order to build a hull that will orient itself so that the line from bow to stern is parallel to the direction of the waves, the moment of inertia along the line from port to starboard must be increased so that it is greater than the moment of inertia along the line from bow to stern. This has been done in the prior art by increasing the dimension of the hull along the line 220 from port 221 to starboard 222, as shown in
(36) In a preferred embodiment, as shown in
(37) In another preferred embodiment, as shown in
(38) In another preferred embodiment, multiple hulls that are part of a system to produce electricity through the action of waves are arranged in a phase array as shown in
(39) With one hull, electricity is produced while a wave is acting on the hull. However, no electricity is produced during the period from one wave ceasing to act on the hull to the next wave beginning to act on the hull. The electricity produced is granular, as shown in
(40) The solution is to orient multiple hulls so that the peak of a first wave in a series of waves is acting on a second when the peak of a second wave is not acting on the first hull. For example, if two hulls 401, 402 are moored by mooring lines 403, 404 in a phase array 400, as shown in
(41) In another preferred embodiment, shown in
(42) Other mooring line configurations in other phase arrays are shown in
(43) In
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(45) While the principles of the invention have been described herein, it is to be understood by those skilled in the art that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation as to the scope of the invention. Other embodiments are contemplated within the scope of the present invention in addition to the exemplary embodiments shown and described herein. Modifications and substitutions by one of ordinary skill in the art are considered to be within the scope of the present invention.