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A wave flume is used to study a scaled model of a stepped bottom dual-chamber Oscillating Water Column (OWC) installed onshore. Compared to traditional single-chamber OWCs, the use of dual-chambers is expected to widen the range of sea states in which the OWC is more efficient, and the step, in front of the first chamber, boosts the capturing energy capacity of the device. The Power Take-Off (PTO) system is modelled as an air opening in the pneumatic chambers. Several experiments combining regular incident waves and PTO damping conditions are performed. Results of the amplitudes of the free surface elevations inside the chambers show that the device can amplify the incident wave amplitude up to 1.57 times in chamber 2. Results of the primary efficiency show that the device is highly dependent on the PTO damping characteristics and can reach around 40% for a wide range of wave periods. Results of the reflection analysis show that the reflection coefficient is also dependent on the PTO damping characteristics but remain lower than 0.6 for all the studied cases. Sloshing phenomenon (mostly in the cross-section direction) was observed for a wavelength close to the cross-section dimension, impacting negatively on the device pneumatic performance.
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J.F.M. Gadelho
University of Lisbon
K. Rezanejad
University of Lisbon
C. Guedes Soares
Iscte – Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Ocean Engineering
University of Lisbon
Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa
National Laboratory for Civil Engineering
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Gadelho et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e7433fb6db6435876bc130 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oceaneng.2024.117240
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