Browsing by Subject "wave energy"
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Item Open Access Optimal Power Generation of a Wave Energy Converter in a Stochastic Environment(2011) Lattanzio, StevenIn applications of ocean wave energy conversion, it is well known that feedback control can be used to achieve favorable performance. Current techniques include methods such as tuning a device to harvest energy at a narrow band of frequencies, which leads to suboptimal performance, or methods that are anticausal and require the future wave excitation to be known. This thesis demonstrates how to determine the maximum-attainable power generation and corresponding controller for a buoy type wave energy converter with multiple generators in a stochastic sea environment using a causal dynamic controller. This is accomplished by solving a nonstandard H2 optimal control problem. The performance of the causal controller is compared to the noncausal controller for various cases. This work provides a significant improvement over current control techniques because it involves a causal controller that can absorb a large amount of power over a broader bandwidth than other control techniques, including absorbing power across multiple modes of resonance. The importance of an adaptive control algorithm is also demonstrated.
Item Open Access Recommended Decision-Making Strategies for San Francisco’s Oceanside Wave Energy Project(2010-04-28T21:54:13Z) Yeung, CarmenAs pressure to develop renewable energy increases, wave energy emerges as one of the potential solutions to the nation’s energy crisis. To displace fossil fuel generation, the City and County of San Francisco (CCSF) is pursuing wave energy as a portion of its energy portfolio. In pursuing this project, CCSF will face several challenges, including the need to understand the regulatory landscape, to move stakeholders from having conversations into a process where feedback is used to form agreements, and analyze different data layers to find preferred wave energy sites. To assist CCSF in moving the Oceanside Wave Energy Project forward, I have: 1) outlined the basic federal and California regulations governing hydrokinetic projects and actions CCSF can take to overcome regulatory challenges , 2) identified existing decision support tools that will formalize the stakeholder process and feedback, and 3) developed the framework of an interactive GIS tool that will allow users to understand the impact of a wave energy project on different environmental and socioeconomic criteria. Together, these products help stakeholders understand the impact of a wave energy project on different regulatory, environmental, and socioeconomic criteria in San Francisco, CA.