Hydrodynamic performance of wave energy converter integrated with pile restrained floating structure near a partially reflecting seawall

dc.contributor.authorPatil, S.B.
dc.contributor.authorKarmakar, D.
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-04T12:26:09Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.description.abstractThe integration of a Wave Energy Converter (WEC) with a Pile-Restrained Rectangular Floating Breakwater (PRFB) in the presence of a partially reflecting vertical seawall is analysed to enhance the hydrodynamic performance and WEC efficiency of the integrated breakwater-WEC device based on small amplitude wave theory using the Boundary Element Method (BEM). The rectangular floating breakwater is designed to have heave motion with a pile-restrained floating structure placed in a position to attenuate the incoming wave in the transmitted region and the linear power take-off (PTO) damping is employed to calculate the absorbed power. The study is performed to understand the effectiveness of wave energy conversion and its hydrodynamic performance due to changes in the seawall's porosity, relative structural width, relative structural draft, wave energy conversion power take-off damping coefficients, and the relative gap of the WEC integrated with PRFB from the seawall. The study demonstrated that in the presence of a fully reflecting seawall, the wave energy extraction is enhanced for the integrated WEC system without compromising the defined threshold wave reflection coefficient but at the expense of a constrained range of wavenumbers that correspond near the system's fundamental natural frequency. Moreover, the capture width ratio is noted to be higher for relatively smaller structural drafts, while the wave reflection coefficient shows precisely the reverse trend. However, under such circumstances, the integrated WEC system operates as a motion-trapping structure, especially when the reflection coefficient of the seawall, C<inf>R</inf>≥0.75. Thus, the present study will assist the designer in determining the appropriate degrees of efficiency of the WEC device without sacrificing hydrodynamic performance by fine-tuning the hybrid floating breakwater system's geometrical parameters. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd
dc.identifier.citationOcean Engineering, 2023, 285, , pp. -
dc.identifier.issn298018
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.oceaneng.2023.115254
dc.identifier.urihttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/21699
dc.publisherElsevier Ltd
dc.subjectBreakwaters
dc.subjectDamping
dc.subjectGeometry
dc.subjectHydrodynamics
dc.subjectPiles
dc.subjectPower takeoffs
dc.subjectReflection
dc.subjectRetaining walls
dc.subjectSailing vessels
dc.subjectWave energy conversion
dc.subjectBoundary element method
dc.subjectBoundary-element methods
dc.subjectCapture width ratio
dc.subjectFloating structures
dc.subjectHydrodynamics performance
dc.subjectMotion trapping structure
dc.subjectPartially reflecting seawall
dc.subjectWave energy converter
dc.subjectWave energy converters
dc.subjectamplitude
dc.subjectboundary element method
dc.subjectbreakwater
dc.subjectfloating structure
dc.subjecthydrodynamics
dc.subjectsea wall
dc.subjectwave energy
dc.titleHydrodynamic performance of wave energy converter integrated with pile restrained floating structure near a partially reflecting seawall

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