Compact Tidal
Generator Could Cut Cost of Producing Electricity
June 15, 2006
Source: Clean Edge News
What happens if you
run an electric motor backwards? That is exactly what researchers Dr
Steve Turnock and Dr Suleiman Abu-Sharkh from the University of
Southampton asked themselves after they had successfully built an
electric motor for tethered underwater vehicles, using funding from the
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
The well-known answer to this question is that it stops being a motor
and becomes a generator. Instead of using electricity to turn a
propeller and drive the vehicle along, the flow of water turns the
propeller, generating electricity. What's new about the Southampton
design is its simplicity. "This is a compact design that does away with
many of the moving parts found in current marine turbines. It's a new
take on tidal energy generation," says Turnock.
Most current tidal stream generators are essentially wind turbines
turned upside down and made to work underwater. They often include
complex gearboxes and move the entire assembly to face the flow of the
water. For example, they turn a half a circle as the tidal current
reverses direction. Gears and moving parts require expensive
maintenance, especially when they are used underwater. This pushes up
the cost of running the turbines, a cost that is passed on to the
consumers of the generated electricity.
The Southampton design does not need to turn around because the design
of its turbine blades means that they turn equally well, regardless of
which way the water flows past them. The blades are also placed in a
specially shaped housing that helps channel the water smoothly through
the turbine.
Another beauty of the Southampton design is that everything is wrapped
in a single package that can be prefabricated so there will be few
on-site construction costs. "Just drop it into flowing water and it will
start generating electricity. It will work best in fast flowing, shallow
water," says Turnock, who foresees rows of these devices secured to sea
floors and riverbeds.
The present prototype is just twenty-five centimetres across and the
research team now plan to design a larger model with improved propeller
blades that will further increase the efficiency of generating
electricity. All being well, the team envisage the generator becoming
commercially available within five years.
To
subscribe or visit go to:
http://www.cleanedge.com/ |