1. Introduction
Oceans and seas can be a fundamental renewable source of energy, considering that they cover almost two-thirds of the Earth’s surface. Ocean energy has great potential, even though harnessing this resource is more difficult than it seems. The main forms of ocean energy are waves, tides, marine currents, salinity, and temperature gradients. Among all of these, the most mature technologies are currently wave and tidal energies. Many different technical concepts for extracting wave energy are presently under study and development [
1,
2,
3,
4]. One of the most promising technologies refers to oscillating water column (OWC) devices (see, e.g., [
5,
6]), that can be either integrated inside a breakwater, in a near-shore configuration, like in the cases of both Civitavecchia’s harbour [
7] and the Mutriku’s harbour [
8,
9] or arranged as a floating device [
10]. In general, an OWC device consists of a chamber that is partially submerged in the seawater, with an air column trapped above a water column inside. The wall of the chamber, which is in front of the sea, presents a big vertical opening. Waves enter through this opening and determine the oscillation of the water surface in the chamber. On the roof of the chamber, there is a conduit connecting it to the atmosphere, and containing the power take-off (PTO) system. The incoming waves cause the water column in the chamber to compress and expand the air pocket inside it, and hence cause the inhalation and exhalation of air through the conduit. This oscillating flow drives the PTO system, which is actually a self-rectifying turbine, e.g., either a Wells turbine [
10] or an impulse turbine [
11]. U-OWC devices ([
12,
13]) belong to the family of OWCs, with some modifications with respect to conventional ones. They are caisson breakwaters in reinforced concrete embodying an OWC with an additional vertical duct on the wave-beaten side. The vertical duct is actually one of the two branches of the U-duct, the other one being the chamber. Like a standard OWC, the air chamber is connected with the atmosphere through a conduit that hosts the PTO system. To exploit a natural resonance with sea waves, the various parts of the plant have to be designed to obtain an eigenperiod of the oscillations of the free water surface inside the chamber close to the incident wave period of the wave train giving the highest energy contribution during the year. The parts to be designed (see
Figure 1) are the width
s, and length
l, of the vertical duct, the width
b, and height
c, of the chamber, and the diameter
D, of the air conduit [
12]. When a U-OWC device works under resonance conditions, it achieves a very large absorption of the incident wave energy. A maximum absorption of
of the incident wave energy has been registered during the experiments carried out on a small-scale device placed in the natural laboratory of Reggio Calabria (Italy) [
14]. Recently, U-OWC devices have been installed in the harbor of Civitavecchia (Italy), located in the Tyrrhenian Sea [
7]. The U-OWCs were located in the area close to the harbor entrance and allowed the creation of a novel basin into the port area.
Numerical one-dimensional models were developed by Boccotti in [
15] and validated against small scale experiments in [
16,
17]. Such models, with some minor modifications, were applied by Arena et al. [
7] to their full-scale U-OWC system to verify their capability of predicting the overall energy performance. However, one-dimensional models are unable to give an insight of the different hydrodynamic processes that occur in the proximity of, and inside the U-OWC system. To overcome the intrinsic limits of these one-dimensional models, a numerical approach based on CFD simulations has been proposed by the authors [
18,
19] and by others (e.g., [
20,
21,
22,
23]). The performance of an OWC device under a range of wavelengths for different wave steepness was analyzed by Kamat et al. [
21] by means of CFD simulations. At lower wave steepness, the effect of wave steepness values on the efficiency of the device was found to be small, but a large reduction in performance was found in the presence of steep non-linear waves. However, to investigate the overall energy conversion process, the simulations of the U-OWC device must include the characteristics of the PTO system. As it is well known, the PTO acts as a damping term in the airflow motion of an OWC excited by the incident waves (e.g., [
24]). To optimize the overall efficiency of the wave energy converter (WEC) device, it must be tuned into the plant (and consequentially the PTO system) to enter in resonance with the most energetic waves of the location. To this aim, numerical modeling is useful to carry out an evaluation of the performance of the OWC operating under different values of the PTO damping (modified by changing its rotational speed), and for different incoming waves. In this work, the computational domain includes a wave flume which is 1 km long by 30 m deep and contains the U-OWC breakwater with its plenum chamber and the conduit hosting the Wells turbine. In this way, we are able to take into account all the energy conversions from waves (generated by means of a piston-type wavemaker) to the power take-off (simulated by means of momentum and energy source terms introduced with a porous medium inside the conduit), similarly to other wave-to-wire models, such as [
25,
26,
27,
28]. In order to take into account the Wells turbine effect on the fluid dynamic behavior of the air and water flow inside the WEC device in the CFD simulations, without determining a significant increase of the computational cost, a porous medium was introduced in the air conduit, giving a pressure drop linearly dependent on the flow rate, according to the Wells turbine characteristic curve. The use of a porous medium was firstly used by the authors in other applications (e.g., see [
29]), and opportunely adapted here. Several examples of a similar approach can be found in various publications. The use of porous media theory to develop a numerical model of the PTO damping effect was explored by Didier et al. [
30], by means of a relationship between the air pressure in the chamber and the airflow velocity across the turbine. The numerical results were validated comparing them with the experimental results collected from a physical model. In that physical model, the turbine damping effect was simulated by a piece of a porous membrane (textile) placed on the top of the cylinder. Moreover, the optimization of the turbine induced damping on an OWC device using a CFD model was studied by Lopez et al. [
31], after validating the model with data from physical model tests. In both the physical and the CFD models, the turbine damping was modeled by carefully designing the area of the orifice at the top of the OWC chamber.
The advantage of using the porous medium is that we correctly take into account the linear characteristic curve of the Wells turbine, rather than approximating it as an orifice which has a parabolic characteristic curve, as it is usually done by many authors [
31,
32,
33]. This paper continues with the description of the numerical experiment (in terms of the computational domain, governing equations, and PTO model) in
Section 2. The fluid dynamic analysis is carried out in
Section 3, describing the wave field evolution inside the flume. Then, in
Section 4 the energetic analysis from the wavemaker to the absorber was described. Furthermore, the attention goes to the captured energy, and finally to the conversion of this energy into available power thanks to the power take-off.
5. Conclusions
A numerical experiment to investigate the energy conversion process from wave to wire of a WEC was presented. The plant belongs to the family of OWCs, even if it is different from conventional plants, due to the presence of an additional vertical duct in front of the wave beaten wall, and connected to the plenum chamber, actually forming a U-duct. Due to this specific configuration, waves cannot enter the plant; therefore, the water motion inside it is like a pipe flow. However, this solution implies both advantages and disadvantages. An advantage is that the outer opening of the vertical duct is closer to the water surface where the pressure fluctuations are larger. However, the U-shape configuration increases the fluid dynamics of minor losses due to abrupt changes in the direction of the water motion. The paper quantifies these losses, simulating the operating conditions of a U-OWC under the action of three different periodic wave trains. The wave sizes are chosen to investigate the plant working near resonance. The PTO system is simulated using an original approach, which utilizes a porous medium in the air duct containing the turbine. The area and the pressure drop across the porous medium are set in order to have the same air discharge and pressure drop across the turbine. The results confirm this model’s success at reproducing the given turbine characteristic curves. The CFD simulations were carried out by means of the commercial CFD code Ansys Fluent v.17, using a Volume of Fluid model to simulate the multiphase flow. The U-OWC breakwater installed in the Civitavecchia’s harbor (Italy) was put in a 2D numerical flume. The energy conversion was analyzed, starting from the generated wave power to the turbine shaft, taking into account the energy dissipation step by step. First of all, we estimated the wave power dissipated along the 1 km flume, with the aim to quantify the actual wave energy which hits the absorber wall. This evaluation can be only carried out supposing a constant-rate energy dissipation along the flume, being that the evaluation of the incident wave energy near the plant is impossible, due to the interaction with the plant itself. Secondly, we evaluated the energy flux captured by the plant and consequently the absorbed coefficient of the plant, is that the latter is the share of the incident wave power captured by the plant. We focused our attention on the amount of energy lost from the plant entrance to the turbine duct. Analyzing the energy conversion process in-depth, for instance considering the SS7 wave train, we found that about
of the energy loss occurs in the water motion, because of the presence of large eddies at the outer opening of the vertical duct and near the lower edge of the exterior wall of the chamber. Therefore, nearly 66% of the absorbed energy is converted into pneumatic power which is made available in the turbine duct. Finally, looking at the streamlines colored by the velocity magnitude (
Figure 13a), it appears evident that the shape of the plant could be optimized, in order to reduce the vortices and consequently, to reduce the energy losses in water.