This study presents a novel self-adaptive marine current power generation system capable of operating efficiently across a wide range of flow velocities. The key innovations include an adaptive variable-solidity rotor and a non-contact magnetic speed-increasing dynamic seal. The rotor employs foldable blades that enable passive solidity regulation in response to varying inflow conditions. At low flow velocities, the blades remain deployed, increasing rotor solidity and reducing the required startup flow velocity. Water tank experiments indicate that the minimum startup velocity of the variable-solidity rotor is 0.217 m/s, which represents a 38% reduction compared to a conventional rotor. At high flow velocities, the blades fold under increased hydrodynamic loading, thereby reducing the effective solidity and suppressing torque growth to provide overload protection. The power transmission module incorporates a non-contact magnetic speed-increasing dynamic seal, which ensures underwater dynamic sealing of the main shaft while simultaneously increasing the rotational speed of the driven shaft. Motor-driven bench tests demonstrate that when the active shaft speed remains below the cut-off threshold, a stable speed-increasing ratio of 2:1 is maintained, enabling effective speed amplification and torque transmission. Once the active shaft speed exceeds the cut-off threshold, the driven shaft automatically stalls, thereby preventing motor overload. Overall, this work provides an effective solution for enhancing the operational adaptability and transmission reliability of marine current energy conversion systems under variable flow conditions.
Geng et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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