Difference between revisions of "Wave Power"

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* [http://www.ceto.com.au/home.php CETO]
 
* [http://www.ceto.com.au/home.php CETO]
 
* [http://www.cwavepower.com/index.html C-WAVE Power]
 
* [http://www.cwavepower.com/index.html C-WAVE Power]
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* [https://patents.google.com/patent/WO2008100157A1/en Patent Application: WO2008100157A1 Floating device for production of energy from water currents]
  
 
{{Energy}}
 
{{Energy}}

Latest revision as of 20:13, 19 December 2017

Braking Wave.jpg

In the book is a nice collection of ways to get energy from waves.

  • The energy you can get from waves is (according to Wikipedia):

Wave Energy.png

ρ = water density (1020 to 1029 kg·m-3 for Seawater)
g = gravity acceleration (9.81 m/s2)
H = wave height

Videos

The West Wave Project
Wave Hub, 10 miles off Hayle on north coast of Cornwall
Pelamis Wave Energy Converter
By Pelamis Wave Power
CETO - SeaPowerPlan invention
Hypalon bladders are affixed to a piston that moves inside a tube secured to the seabed. The bladder is a float that rides up and down on underwater wave cycles, and the "piston inside a tube" is a pump that sends high pressure seawater over tubing for remotely generating electricity and/or desalinating the seawater.
Google Tech Talk
On wave energy and Pelamis


See also

Links


Energy
Hydrothermal · OTEC · Wave Power · Currents · Osmotic Power · Energy Storage · Micro-grid · Biofuel · Wind turbines · Kites · Photovoltaics · Nuclear