Tidal Power (CH 5.4, 5.9-5.10) : Phys 105 Dr. Harris 4/1/13
Tidal Power (CH 5.4, 5.9-5.10) : Phys 105 Dr. Harris 4/1/13
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Phys 105
Dr. Harris
4/1/13
What Causes Tides?
• http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/earth/what-causes-the-tides.html
high tide
low tide
History of Tidal
• Tidal energy is one of the oldest forms of energy used by humans
• Dating back to 787 A.D., tide mills were constructed, consisting of a
storage pond and a sluice (gate that controls water flow).
– During the incoming tide (flood), the sluice would open to allow rising
waters to fill the storage pond
– During the outgoing tide (ebb), the stored water would be released
over a waterwheel
• In the early 1960’s, the first commercial scale tidal power plant was built
in St. Malo, France, consisting of twenty four 10MW turbines.
Tidal Barrages
• The ocean’s tides can be used to accumulate potential energy, which can
be converted to mechanical energy by turning a turbine in a manner quite
similar to hydropower.
• As the tides rise and fall daily, basins along the shoreline naturally fill and
empty. A complete tidal cycle takes 12.5 hours, so there are two high tides
and two low tides a day.
• Efforts are underway to anchor turbines to the ocean floor to harness tidal
energy. This concept is proven, and in practice in a handful of locations on
a small scale.
• This form of generation has many advantages over its other tidal energy
rivals. The turbines are submerged in the water and are therefore out of
sight. They don’t pose a problem for navigation and shipping and require
the use of much less material in construction.
• Tidal turbines are vastly better than wind turbines in terms of efficiency. A
tidal turbine produces 4 times the output power per square meter of
sweep area as a wind turbine, with a substantially smaller environmental
impact.
Siemens “SeaGen (S)” Tidal Turbine
Domestic Tidal Power
• There are no tidal power stations in the U.S., but plans are underway to
build a small tidal power farm in the East River of NYC.
– 300 underwater turbines
– On average, 10 MW of power (44GWh of electricity per year, enough
for 8000 households)
• Alaska, Maine, and southeast Canada are potential target areas for
barrages.
Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC)
• The world’s oceans constitute a vast natural reservoir for receiving and
storing heat energy from the sun
• Nearly 75% of the surface area of Earth is water. Due to the high heat
capacity of water, the, water near the surface is maintained at significant
higher temperatures than water at greater depth
• It is possible to extract energy from the oceans through the use of heat
engines in order to exploit the temperature differences between warm
surface water and the cold, deep water
Oceanic Temperature Differences Between
Surface and 1000m Depth
Closed-Cycle OTEC System
• Using the water temperatures from the last slide, calculate the theoretical
efficiency of an ideal heat engine?
𝑇𝑐𝑜𝑙𝑑 278
η= 1− 𝑥 100% = 1 − 𝑥 100% = 6.7%
𝑇ℎ𝑜𝑡 298
• Very little was done after this until the 1970’s when rising fuel costs
prompted the US to reopen studies of OTEC
– The Department of Energy financed the design of a large floating OTEC
plant intended to provide power to the islands, with transmission lines
running along the ocean floor
– A small test plant (10 kW) was built in the late 70’s and operated
successfully for four months off the coast of Hawaii. Since then, there
has been no support of OTEC technology
Wave Energy
• The kinetic energy of moving
waves can be used to power a
turbine.
• In this simple example the wave
rises into a chamber. The rising
water forces the air out of the
chamber. The moving air spins a
turbine which can turn a
generator.
• When the wave drops, this
creates a vacuum in the
chamber, causing air to flow in
the opposite direction
Advantages