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Mechanical Extraction of Power From Ocean Currents and Tides

Wednesday, March 03 2010

Page 1 of 2

Turbine Blades Would Intercept Flow in the ocean or other natural body of water. The turbine would drive a pump to obtain a smaller, higher-pressure flow that would be piped to an above-water facility for use in generating electric power.
Turbine Blades Would Intercept Flow in the ocean or other natural body of water. The turbine would drive a pump to obtain a smaller, higher-pressure flow that would be piped to an above-water facility for use in generating electric power.
A proposed scheme for generating electric power from rivers and from ocean currents, tides, and waves is intended to offer economic and environmental advantages over prior such schemes, some of which are at various stages of implementation, others of which have not yet advanced beyond the concept stage. This scheme would be less environmentally objectionable than are prior schemes that involve the use of dams to block rivers and tidal flows. This scheme would also not entail the high maintenance costs of other proposed schemes that call for submerged electric generators and cables, which would be subject to degradation by marine growth and corrosion.

A basic power-generation system according to the scheme now proposed would not include any submerged electrical equipment. The submerged portion of the system would include an all-mechanical turbine/pump unit that would superficially resemble a large land-based wind turbine (see figure). The turbine axis would turn slowly as it captured energy from the local river flow, ocean current, tidal flow, or flow from an ocean-wave device. The turbine axis would drive a pump through a gearbox to generate an enclosed flow of water, hydraulic fluid, or other suitable fluid at a relatively high pressure [typically ≈500 psi (≈3.4 MPa)].

The pressurized fluid could be piped to an onshore or offshore facility, above the ocean surface, where it would be used to drive a turbine that, in turn, would drive an electric generator. The fluid could be recirculated between the submerged unit and the power-generation facility in a closed flow system; alternatively, if the fluid were seawater, it could be taken in from the ocean at the submerged turbine/pump unit and discharged back into the ocean from the power-generation facility. Another alternative would be to use the pressurized flow to charge an elevated reservoir or other pumped-storage facility, from whence fluid could later be released to drive a turbine/generator unit at a time of high power demand.


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Comments (1)
Electric Power From Ocean Currents & from rivers
The proposal on the above subject is good, pl mail me if you are extending technical support for maufacturing of these equipments in India. As there is acute power shortage in the country we are interested in manufacturing & marketing these products.pl convey your terms & conditions for the same
Posted on Saturday, March 20 2010 by Rama Prasad

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