Chapter Seven: Mamuye Busier Yesuf
Chapter Seven: Mamuye Busier Yesuf
Chapter Seven: Mamuye Busier Yesuf
Tides are the cyclic rising and falling of Earth's ocean surface caused
by the tidal forces of the Moon and the Sun acting on the Earth.
Tides cause changes in the depth of the sea and produce oscillating
currents known as tidal streams, making prediction of tides important for
coastal navigation.
The strip of seashore that is submerged at high tide and exposed at low tide,
the intertidal zone, is an important ecological product of ocean tides.
The Earth and Moon, looking at the
North Pole
The relative distance of the Moon from the Earth also affects tide heights.
When the Moon is at perigee the range is increased and when it is at
apogee the range is reduced.
gravitational force
Spring tides are especially strong tides (they do not have anything
to do with the season Spring).
They occur when the Earth, the Sun, and the Moon are in a line.
The gravitational forces of the Moon and the Sun both contribute to
the tides.
Spring tides occur during the full moon and the new moon.
Proxigean Spring Tide
The Bay of Fundy at high tide The Bay of Fundy at low tide
Tidal range
1 2 3 4 5 6
0° 32.07 0 0 0 78.29
45° 32.38 22.90 23.44 -O.54 68.59
Column 1 : Longitude along any Earth equator passing through the axis,
counted from the trans-lunar nodal point.
Column 2: The axial gravitational force of the Moon at longitudes from 0° to 180°.
Column 3: The tangential component of the gravitational force (value of Col. 2
multiplied by sin n).
Column 4: The tangential component of the centrifugal force (33.1 micronewtons
multiplied by sin n).
Column 5: The tide-raising force.
Column 6: The radial centrifugal force, having no effect on the tides, is shown for
comparison.
Application of tide to generate
electricity
Tidal Stream Turbines
This has the advantage of being much cheaper to build, and does
not have the environmental problems that a tidal barrage would bring.
Application of tide to create barrage
The barrage method of extracting tidal energy involves building a barrage and creating
a tidal lagoon. The barrage traps a water level inside a basin. Head ( a height of water
pressure) is created when the water level outside of the basin or lagoon changes
relative to the water level inside. The head is used to drive turbines. In any design this
leads to a decrease of tidal range inside the basin or lagoon, implying a reduced
transfer of water between the basin and the sea. This reduced transfer of water
accounts for the energy produced by the scheme. The largest such installation has
been working on the Rance river
The basic elements of a barrage are caissons, embankments, sluices, turbines and
ship locks. Sluices, turbines and ship locks are housed in caisson (very large concrete
blocks). Embankments seal a basin where it is not sealed by caissons.
The sluice gates applicable to tidal power are the flap gate, vertical rising gate, radial
gate and rising sector.
Barrage systems have been plagued with the dual problems of high civil infrastructure
costs associated with what is in effect a dam being placed across two estuarine
systems, one for the high water dam storage and the other a low water dam for the
release of the storage, and, the environmental problems associated with the flooding
of two ecosystems.
Application of tide to generate
electricity
A weir is a small overflow-type dam commonly used to raise the level of a river
or stream. Weirs have traditionally been used to create mill ponds in such places.
Water flows over the top of a weir, although some weirs have sluice gates which
release water at a level below the top of the weir. The crest of an overflow spillway
on a large dam is often called a weir.
Country Place Mean tidal range (m) Area of basin (km²) Maximum capacity (MW)
Argentina San Jose 5.9 - 6800
Australia Secure Bay 10.9 - ?
Cobequid 12.4 240 5338
Canada Cumberland 10.9 90 1400
Shepody 10.0 115 1800
Kutch 5.3 170 900
India
Cambay 6.8 1970 7000
Garolim 4.7 100 480
Korea
Cheonsu 4.5 - -
Rio Colorado 6-7 - ?
Mexico
Tiburon - - ?
Tidal power schemes being considered
Country Place Mean tidal range (m) Area of basin (km²) Maximum capacity (MW)
The estimated 15TW total energy consumption of 2004 was divided as follows:
World renewable energy in 2005 (except 2004 data for items marked* or **).
Source Renewables, Global Status Report 2006.
Renewable resources
Available renewable energy. The volume of the cubes represent the amount of
available wind and solar energy. The small red cube shows the proportional global
energy consumption. Values are in TW =1012 Watt. The amount of available renewable
energy dwarfs the global consumption.
Renewable resources
The winds cause waves on the surface of the ocean (and on lakes).
The wind transfers some of its energy to the water,
through friction between the air molecules and the water molecules.
Stronger winds (like storm surges) cause larger waves.
You can make your own miniature waves by blowing across the surface
of a pan of water.
Waves of water do not move horizontally, they only move up and down
(a wave does not represent a flow of water). You can see a demonstration
of this by watching a floating buoy bob up and down with a wave;
it does not, however, move horizontally with the wave.
Motion of a particle in a ocean wave
Motion of a particle in a ocean wave.
A = At deep water.
B = At shallow water (ocean floor is now at B).
The circular movement of a surface particle
becomes elliptical with decreasing depth.
1 = Progression of wave
2 = Crest
3 = Trough
Wave motion
Waves are oscillations in the water's surface. For oscillations to exist and to
propagate, like the vibrating of a guitar string or the standing waves in a flute,
there must be a returning force that brings equilibrium. The tension in a string
and the pressure of the air are such forces.
Wave motion
These two diagrams show the relationships between wave speed and period for
various depths (left), and wave length and period (right), for periodic, progressive
surface waves. (Adapted from Van Dorn, 1974) Note that the term phase velocity
is more precise than wave speed.
The period of waves is easy to measure using a stopwatch, whereas wave length
and speed are not. In the left picture, the red line gives the linear relationship
between wave speed and wave period. A 12 second swell in deep water travels at
about 20m/s or 72 km/hr. From the red line in the right diagram, we can see that
such swell has a wave length between crests of about 250m.
Waves and wind
How wind causes water to form waves is easy to understand although many
Intricate details still lack a satisfactory theory. On a perfectly calm sea, the wind
has practically no grip. As it slides over the water surface film, it makes it move.
As the water moves, it forms eddies and small ripples.
how do we measure waves objectively?
When the wind blows sufficiently long from the same direction, the waves it creates,
reach maximum size, speed and period beyond a certain distance (fetch) from the
shore. This is called a fully developed sea. Because the waves travel at speeds
close to that of the wind, the wind is no longer able to transfer energy to them and
the sea state has reached its maximum. In the picture the wave spectra of three
different fully developed seas are shown. The bell curve for a 20 knot wind (green) is
flat and low and has many high frequency components (wave periods 1-10 seconds).
As the wind speed increases, the wave spectrum grows rapidly while also expanding
to the low frequencies (to the right)
Waves entering shallow water
As waves enter shallow water, they slow down, grow taller and change shape.
At a depth of half its wave length, the rounded waves start to rise and their crests
become shorter while their troughs lengthen. Although their period (frequency)
stays the same, the waves slow down and their overall wave length shortens.
The 'bumps' gradually steepen and finally break in the surf when depth becomes
less than 1.3 times their height. Note that waves change shape in depths depending
on their wave length, but break in shallows relating to their height!
Wave groups
The novel ocean wave energy converter consists of an array of parallel Savonius
rotors with elastic blades, which are arranged to form a plane and are mounted on
tensioned axes in a rectangular frame.
The diameter of the rotors is small compared to their length, and compared to the
height of the waves. The rotors are made of rubber or plastic on a core of aluminium
and rotate around tensioned axes of carbon fibres or coated steel.
At the ends of each rotor sit small dynamos which transform the rotational movement
of the rotors into electricity. In order to capture energy from waves the proposed
converter must be positioned right beneath the water surface and oriented parallel to it.
An Ocean Wave Energy Converter
The basis of the wave converter is the omni-directional Savonius rotor with
elastic blades shown below. Savonius rotors are driven by any local water flow
that has a directional component perpendicular to their axis, no matter from
which direction the water comes. Under the ocean waves there is an oscillating
flow field that locally changes its direction all the time.
An Ocean Wave Energy Converter
Using a multitude of small rotors instead of a big one has several advantages.
Small rotors can be placed much closer to the water surface,
where most of the wave energy is. An array of small rotors covering the same
water flux as a big rotor requires much less material to harvest the same flow power.
An Ocean Wave Energy Converter
(1) rotors, (2) frame, (3) floating body, (4) stabilizer plate, (5) connecting chain,
(6) anchor chain, (7) anchor, (8) ocean waves, (9) sea ground.
An Ocean Wave Energy Converter
One effective way of planning future R&D needs is by use of the Roadmap ?
a diagram with a timeline, showing the main R&D targets and the associated
events and activities, set against the timeline as a high-level plan. It displays
the generic issues that must be addressed if wave power is to become
commercially realisable in the next few years.
THE END