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Validation Begins for Wave Energy Conversion System

January 12, 2017 by Jeff Shepard

The National Wind Technology Center (NWTC) at the Energy Department's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) has begun validation work on the first water power technology ever tested in an NREL dynamometer facility. NREL is working with Columbia Power Technologies' StingRAY wave energy converter. Designed to deliver electricity at a competitive cost while having a low environmental impact, its floats and generators convert the energy in ocean waves into electricity.

"Though designed to benefit the wind industry, the NWTC's large dynamometer facility is being leveraged to help advance new ocean energy technology," said NWTC Director Daniel Laird. "While still in the early stages of development, ocean energy is progressing rapidly. Over the coming decades, ocean energy could become a major source of electricity powering high-population-density areas near the coasts."

"We are testing the StingRAY at the NWTC because the core design is similar to a wind turbine-it is direct drive, but with a very large diameter," Columbia Power Technologies CEO Reenst Lesemann said. "The dynamometer can mimic the sea, with back-and-forth oscillation, and will put the generator through its paces to ensure it can withstand ocean forces."

Mechanical testing of the StingRAY generator, which is as tall as a two-story building and the largest generator ever tested in an NWTC dynamometer, is now under way. Over the next few months, the unit will be connected to the NWTC's Controllable Grid Interface for electrical performance characterization.

"We have one of the only facilities in the country with a dynamometer that can apply rotational torque at the speeds and forces required while also applying non-torque loads-which are side forces that simulate the action of a rogue wave hitting a wave energy converter in the ocean," said Mark McDade, NWTC project manager. "This matters because the structures of these energy conversion devices must be designed to handle the side forces without damage. The work is pioneering in the field of ocean energy conversion."

This land-based validation effort, which is co-sponsored by Columbia Power Technologies and the Department of Energy's Water Power Technologies Office, will occur prior to an open-water demonstration of the system scheduled for 2017 at the U.S. Navy's Wave Energy Test Site in Hawaii.