Abstract There are numerous designs and concepts that have been offered to extract energy from ocean waves. A heaving buoy is distinguished as the most popular device which predominantly harnesses… Click to show full abstract
Abstract There are numerous designs and concepts that have been offered to extract energy from ocean waves. A heaving buoy is distinguished as the most popular device which predominantly harnesses energy from the vertical motion in waves. One such device is the bottom-referenced submerged heaving buoy represented by the Carnegie Clean Energy CETO system. The total power absorption of this converter can be increased by replacing the single-tether power take-off system by a three-tether mooring configuration thereby making motion controllable in heave and surge. The current paper provides a comparative performance analysis of the generic submerged heaving buoy connected to one tether and the three-tether converter in terms of the buoy motion, and design of the power take-off and mooring systems. This is accompanied by a techno-economic analysis of two converters.
               
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