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Energy%20from%20ocean%20currents

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Energy from ocean currents Ocean currents flow at a steady velocity Place turbines in these currents (like the gulf stream) that operate just like wind turbines – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy%20from%20ocean%20currents


1
Energy from ocean currents
  • Ocean currents flow at a steady velocity
  • Place turbines in these currents (like the gulf
    stream) that operate just like wind turbines
  • Water is more than 800 times denser than air, so
    for the same surface area, water moving 12 miles
    per hour exerts about the same amount of force as
    a constant 110 mph wind.
  • Expensive proposition
  • Upkeep could be expensive and complicated
  • Environmental concerns
  • species protection (including fish and marine
    mammals) from injury from turning turbine blades.
  • Consideration of shipping routes and present
    recreational uses of location
  • Other considerations include risks from slowing
    the current flow by extracting energy.

2
The ocean as a heat engine
  • There can be a 20 difference between ocean
    surface temps and the temp at 1000m
  • The surface acts as the heat source, the deeper
    cold water acts as a heat sink.
  • Temperature differences are very steady
  • Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and other pacific
    islands are well suited to take advantage of this
    idea.
  • Called OTEC (Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion)

3
Types of Ocean heat engines
  • Closed cycle system
  • Heat from warm seawater causes a fluid like
    ammonia to be evaporated in an evaporator
  • Expanding vapor rotates a turbine connected to an
    electric generator.
  • Cold seawater is brought up and cools the ammonia
    vapor in a condenser. This liquid returns to the
    evaporator and the process repeats.

4
Types of OTECs
  • Open Cycle Systems
  • Working fluid is the seawater.
  • Warm seawater is brought into a partial vacuum.
  • In the vacuum, the warm seawater boils and the
    steam drives a turbine
  • The steam enters a condenser, where it is cooled
    by cold seawater brought up form below and it
    condenses back into liquid and is discharged into
    the ocean.

5
Boiling water in a vacuum
  • The boiling point of any liquid depends upon
    temperature and pressure.
  • Boiling occurs when the molecules in the liquid
    have enough energy to break free from surrounding
    molecules
  • If you reduce the pressure, you reduce the amount
    of energy needed for the molecules to break free.
  • Creating a vacuum reduces the air pressure on the
    molecules and lowers the boiling point.

6
OTECs
  • Carnot Efficiency is low, only about 7
  • Net efficiency even lower, only about 2.5
  • Low efficiencies require large water volumes to
    produce appreciable amount of electricity
  • For 100 mW output, you would need 25 X 106
    liters/sec of warm and cold water.
  • For a 40 mW plant, a 10 meter wide intake pipe is
    needed. This is the size of a traffic tunnel.

7
History of OTECs
  • Jacques d Arsonval in 1881 first proposed the
    idea
  • Completed by his student, Georges Claude in 1930.
    (Claude also invented the neon lightbulb)
  • Claude built and tested the first OTEC system
  • Not much further interest until the energy crisis
    of the 1970s.
  • In the 1970s, US DOE financed large floating OTEC
    power plant to provide power to islands
  • One was built in Hawaii.
  • Little further support

8
OTEC Plant on Keahole Point, Hawaii
9
Other uses for OTEC plants
  • Generate Hydrogen for use as a clean fuel source
  • Generate fertilizer from biological nutrients
    that are drawn up from the ocean floor in the
    cold water intake.
  • Source of ocean water to be used as drinking
    water via desalination (taking out the salt).

10
Tidal Energy
  • Most of the energy sources we have been
    discussing derived their energy from the sun
    originally.
  • Tides are driven by gravity
  • Gravity is a force that exists between any two
    objects based upon their mass and the distance
    between them
  • Fg GmM/R2 where M and m are the masses of the
    two objects, R is the distance between them and G
    is the gravitational constant 6.67300 10-11
    m3 kg-1 s-2

11
Tides
  • So the moon and Earth exert a force of gravity on
    each other. The motion of the moon around the
    Earth counteracts the Earths pull, so the moon
    does not fall into the Earth.
  • The moons pull on the Earth causes any material
    that can flow on the Earths surface, like large
    bodies of water, to pile up underneath the moon.

12
Tides
  • The sun also causes tides the Earth, though the
    effect is small, unless the sun and moon line up
    and work together (spring tide) or are at right
    angles to each other and work against each other
    (neap tides).
  • In areas where there are natural basins on the
    coastline, water flows in and out of these
    basins.
  • So there are regular, predictable motions in the
    oceans which could be used as an energy source.

13
Capturing Tidal Power
  • Dams or barrage with gates are usually built
    across the mouth of basins
  • This allows the current to be directed into the
    turbines and enhances the effect.

14
Rance River Tidal Power station in France
15
Current and Future tidal power stations
  • Rance River, France 240Mw
  • White sea, Russia 1 MW
  • Annapolis River, Nova Scotia, Canada, 18mW
  • Two most favorable sites in the US Cook Inlet
    and Bristol Bay in Alaska and Bay of Funday which
    covers the Northeastern US and southeastern
    Canada.
  • Development of the Bay of Funday would provide
    15,000mW to the northeastern US and 15,000mW to
    Canada

16
Bay of Fundy
17
Power
  • Power P Cp x 0.5 x ? x A x V³
  • Cp is the turbine coefficient of performance
  • P the power generated (in watts)
  • ? the density of the water (seawater is
    1025 kg/m³)
  • A the sweep area of the turbine (in m²)
  • V³ the velocity of the flow cubed (i.e. V x
    V x V)

18
Environmental Issues
  • alters the flow of saltwater in and out of
    estuaries, which changes the hydrology and
    salinity and possibly negatively affects the
    marine mammals that use the estuaries as their
    habitat
  • Some species lost their habitat due to La Rances
    construction, but other species colonized the
    abandoned space, which caused a shift in
    diversity.
  • Turbidity (the amount of matter in suspension in
    the water) decreases as a result of smaller
    volume of water being exchanged between the basin
    and the sea. This lets light from the Sun to
    penetrate the water further, improving conditions
    for the phytoplankton. The changes propagate up
    the food chain, causing a general change in the
    ecosystem.
  • If the turbines are moving slowly enough, such as
    low velocities of 25-50 rpm, fish kill is
    minimalized and silt and other nutrients are able
    to flow through the structures . Tidal fences
    block off channels, which makes it difficult for
    fish and wildlife to migrate through those
    channels. Larger marine mammals such as seals or
    dolphins can be protected from the turbines by
    fences or a sonar sensor auto-breaking system
    that automatically shuts the turbines down when
    marine mammals are detected
  • As a result of less water exchange with the sea,
    the average salinity inside the basin decreases,
    also affecting the ecosystem
  • Estuaries often have high volume of sediments
    moving through them, from the rivers to the sea.
    The introduction of a barrage into an estuary may
    result in sediment accumulation within the
    barrage, affecting the ecosystem and also the
    operation of the barrage.

19
Innovative strategies
  • East River in New York-tidal river
  • Plans for 300 underwater turbines to
    tap the rivers 4
    knot tidal flow and
    produce 10mW
  • Already tested with a prototype, took
  • 3 attempts. First two the blades were
    torn off by
    the currents.
  • Tidal Lagoons
  • Artificial lagoons with high walls.
  • Lagoon fills and empties through apertures,
    turbines are spun and generate electricity
  • doesnt disturb current environmental conditions
    as much and expands locations by only requiring
    large tidal variations

20
Wave Energy
  • It is estimated that there is 2-3 million mW of
    energy in the waves breaking on the world
    coastlines, with energies derived ultimately form
    the wind
  • In Great Britain alone, almost twice the current
    electricity demand breaks on the countries
    coastlines every day.
  • A vast untapped resource, but how to harness it?

21
How are waves formed
  • As wind blows along the surface of a body of
    water, a surface wave develops.
  • As the wind blows, pressure and friction forces
    perturb the equilibrium of the water surface
  • These forces transfer energy from the air to the
    water, forming waves.
  • The water molecules actually move in circular
    motion
  • When a wave can no longer support its top, it
    collapses or breaks.
  • Usually happens when a wave reaches shallow
    water, such as near a coastline.

22
Harnessing the energy
  • LIMPET (Land Installed Marine Powered Energy
    Transformer)
  • Breakwater Design
  • PowerBuoys
  • Pelamis

23
LIMPET
  • Takes the wave into a funnel and drives air
    pressure past two turbines, each of which turns a
    250 kW generator.
  • Installed on the island of Islay, off Scotlands
    west coast.

24
Breakwater
  • Installed where there would normally be a
    breakwater
  • a series of layered reservoirs up a carefully
    calculated slope.
  • This is then converted to kinetic energy (by
    falling down), and this turns the
    turbine/generator.
  • A 500m breakwater can produce respectable 150 kW
    generator capacity
  • Only in design phase, non of these up and running
    yet

25
PowerBuoys
  • In a permanent magnet linear generator buoy, an
    electric coil surrounds a magnetic shaft inside
    the buoy
  • the magnetic shaft is anchored to the sea floor.
    When waves cause the coil to move up and down
    relative to the fixed magnetic shaft, voltage is
    induced and electricity is generated.
  • Each buoy could potentially produce 250 kilowatts
    of power.
  • A fleet of about 200 such buoys could power the
    business district of downtown Portland.

26
PELAMIS
  • made of large semi-submerged sections, like a
    submarine cut into pieces
  • the wave action makes the Pelamis bend between
    the sections.
  • This bending action forces hydraulic pistons to
    move in the device and push fluid around
    generating a linear flow, which produces energy.
  • A 1 sq kilometer farm could produce 30 Megawatts.

27
Geothermal Energy
  • Based on the heat that naturally occurs in the
    Earths interior
  • Sine the Earths interior is hotter than the
    surface, this heat flows from the interior
    towards the surface.
  • Heat is the result of decay of radioactive nuclei
    inside the Earth, heat left over from the
    formation of the Earth and heat from the friction
    of heavier material sinking towards the center.
  • Earths core temperature is 7200 F, which is
    close to the temperature on the Suns surface.

28
Radioactive Decay
  • the process in which an unstable atomic nucleus
    loses energy by emitting ionizing particles and
    radiation.
  • Most important source of heat inside the earth
  • loss of energy results in an atom of one type
    (parent nuclide) transforming to an atom of a
    different type, (daughter nuclide).
  • Eg a carbon-14 atom (the "parent") emits
    radiation and transforms to a nitrogen-14 atom
    (the "daughter").
  • This is a random process on the atomic level, in
    that it is impossible to predict when a given
    atom will decay, but given a large number of
    similar atoms the decay rate, on average, is
    predictable.

29
Geothermal
  • Not a new idea
  • Used the heat from inside the Earth for thousands
    of years for bathing (hot springs) and space
    heating.
  • First electric power use was by Prince Piero
    Ginori Conti tested the first geothermal power
    generator on 4 July 1904 in Larderello, Italy.
  • In 1958 New Zealand built a plant of its own.
  • First geothermal power plant in the United States
    was made in 1922 by John D. Grant at The Geysers
    Resort Hotel.
  • In 1960, Pacific Gas and Electric began operation
    of the first successful geothermal power plant in
    the United States at The Geysers. The original
    turbine installed lasted for more than 30 years
    and produced 11 MW net power.

30
The Geysers
  • The Geysers is a geothermal power field located
    72 miles (116 km) north of San Francisco,
    California.
  • It is the largest geothermal development in the
    world.
  • It is currently outputting over 750 MW. It
    consists of 22 separate power plants that utilize
    steam from more than 350 producing wells.
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