Solar Energy-Powered Boats: State of the Art and Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Maritime Drones
3. Sporting Boats
Monaco Energy Boat Challenge
4. Touristic Boats
5. Other Applications
6. Conclusions and Future Directions
- Short-range solar boats: These boats primarily rely on solar energy for their regular operations, with motor power levels comparable to the solar energy input.
- Long-range solar boats: Similarly, the motors in these boats have power levels of the same order as the solar panels. However, the larger battery capacity enables continuous operations during nighttime or adverse weather conditions.
- Solar energy-assisted electric boats: This type of boat is characterized by significant battery and motor sizes, rendering the contribution of solar panels negligible.
- The need for long-lasting autonomy, spanning several hours, days, or even months.
- Low power density requirements to encourage students to find optimal hydrodynamic, structural, and electronic solutions for competition boats.
- Absence of local pollutant emissions to ensure compatibility with protected or naturalistic areas.
- Silent operations to minimize noise pollution.
- Independence from charging stations. However, the aforementioned low power density limits the suitability of PV energy for discontinuous, low-power-demanding applications.
- Improved solar panel efficiency: One area of focus is enhancing the efficiency of solar panels used on boats. Researchers and engineers are continually developing more efficient photovoltaic cells, which can generate greater amounts of electricity from sunlight. Higher efficiency solar panels would enable boats to generate more power, increasing their speed and range. A specific issue to be investigated is the durability of PV modules, particularly when exposed to marine environments.
- Energy storage technology: Advancements in energy storage technology, such as batteries, will play a crucial role in the future development of solar-powered boats. More efficient and lightweight batteries with higher energy density will allow boats to store larger amounts of solar-generated energy, extending their operational range and enabling them to operate during low-light conditions.
- Wind energy or hydrogen fuel cells: Besides solar energy, there is growing interest in combining solar power with other zero-emission technologies, such as wind energy or hydrogen fuel cell technology, for marine applications. Integrating solar panels with these systems could enhance the efficiency and range of solar-powered boats.
- Lightweight materials and design: Future advancements may focus on using lightweight materials and innovative boat designs to maximize energy efficiency. Lighter boat structures reduce energy requirements and allow for the better utilization of solar power. Advanced composite materials and hydrodynamic designs can decrease drag and increase overall performance.
- Smart energy management systems: Developing intelligent energy management systems will be crucial for optimizing the use of solar power on boats. These systems would dynamically allocate energy based on real-time conditions, such as solar irradiation, battery charge levels, and boat speed. Smart energy management can enhance overall efficiency and ensure optimal utilization of available solar energy.
- Integration of electric propulsion systems: Solar-powered boats can benefit from advancements in electric propulsion technology. More efficient electric motors and propulsion systems will increase speed and better maneuverability. Additionally, advancements in electric motor design can lead to quieter and smoother operation, enhancing the boating experience.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
MDPI | Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute |
ASV | Autonomous Surface Vehicle |
AUV | Autonomous Underwater Vehicle |
PV | Photo Voltaic |
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Reference | Typology and Name of the ASV/AUV | Dimension and Weight | Solar Panel, Motor Power and Battery Capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
[20] | Sailboat | 4.2 m | 25 W | Equipped with a 5 m span rigid sail |
// | // | |||
// | 2.0 kWh | |||
[22] | Sailboat | 3.5 m | 60 W | Equipped with flexible sails, solar panel flat on the deck, and Savonius wind generator |
ASAROME | // | // | ||
// | 7.7 kWh | |||
[23] | Sailboat | 4.18 m | 50 W | Equipped by rigid sail, and solar panel with sun tracking |
// | 1.05 m | // | ||
470 kg | 1.3 kWh | |||
[24,25] | Monohull | 5.5 m | 1000 W | May form a fleet of long duration ASV platforms, but with a limited speed (3 km/h) |
// | 1.5 m | // | ||
1500 kg | // | |||
[26] | Monohull | 5.0 m | 1000 W | Slow, but with 6 h autonomy. It can act like a buoy |
Buscamos-RobObs | 1.97 m | 1800 W | ||
1000 kg | 10.8 kWh | |||
[27,28] | Monohull | 4.8 m | 750 W | Highly hydrodynamic hull, effective control, very precise navigation |
SeaTrac | 1.39 m | 500/1000 W | ||
300 kg | 6.75 kWh | |||
[29] | Monohull | 3.5 m | 315 W | Very extended autonomy due to the combined use of wave energy |
Autonaut | 0.7 m | // | ||
180 kg | 840 Wh | |||
[30] | Catamaran | 4.9 m | 300 W | Extended autonomy up to 24 h, safety docking capabilities |
// | // | // | ||
// | // | |||
[31] | Catamaran | 3.875 m | 300 W | Equipped with a large solar panel. Sun tracking on one axis only |
Movarid | 2.33 m | // | ||
700/1700 kg | 8000 Wh | |||
[32] | Paddle wheel boat | 0.86 m | 30 W | Semi-autonomous, equipped with paddle wheels, extremely cheap |
// | 0.63 m | // | ||
<39 kg | 84 Wh | |||
[33] | Monohull | 1.0 m | 55 W | Extremely small and cheap |
// | // | // | ||
// | 84 Wh | |||
[34] | AUV | 2.3 m | 120 W | The PV panels suffer from marine life growth while submerged. |
SAUV II | 1.1 m | // | ||
200 kg | 2 kWh | |||
[35] | AUV/Boat | 1.6 m | 80 W | The PV panels are towed on a small surface vehicle |
Solar AEGIR | 0.6 m | // | ||
168 kg | 300 Wh | |||
[36] | AUV Glider | 0.7 m | 1.5 W | No motors, only buoyancy control, extremely efficient |
SORA | 0.73 m | 5 W | ||
3.5 kg | Capacitor | |||
[37] | AUV/Board | 2.0 m | 86 W | Powered by sea waves |
The Wave Glider | 0.6 m | // | ||
75 kg | 665 Wh |
Reference | Name | Typology | Length and Weight | Solar Panel Power and Battery Capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[38] | Sun Warrior | Monohull | 6 m | 200–480 W | Originally it had no battery, hull from a sailing catamaran |
// | 1.0 kWh | ||||
[38] | Sun Warrior II | Monohull | 6 m | 40–480 W | Fiberglass/foam hull, flexible setup for different races |
// | 1.0 kWh | ||||
[38] | War Eagle II | Monohull | 6 m | 480 W | Carbon fibre reinforced plastics (CFRP) hull |
// | 1.0–1.5 kWh | ||||
[45] | Episode | Trimaran | 5 m | 168 W | Desing of the hull made by CFD |
180 kg | 86 Wh | ||||
[46] | Nusrat | Monohull | 5.5 m | 480 W | Multiple configurations for different races, outboard motor |
81 kg (hull) | 1.0–1.5 kWh | ||||
[46] | Muavenet | Monohull | 5.2 m | 480 W | Multiple configurations for different races, onboard motor |
41.5 kg (hull) | 1.0–1.5 kWh | ||||
[47,48,49] | Scylla | Monohull | 6.04 m | 875 W | Standard dislocating boat |
162 kg | 1.0 kWh | ||||
[54,55] | Semi-Trimaran | 5.8 m | 1200 W | Hull made by optimized CFRP sandwich | |
300 kg | 3 kWh |
Team, Name and Nation | Typology | Length and Weight | Motor Power, Maximum Speed in Dislocation and Foiling | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sunflare Solar Team | Hydrofoil | 6 m | 6 kW | Mechanically oriented foils |
91 kg | 35 km/h | |||
The Netherlands | 53 km/h | |||
University of Antwerp | Monohull | 6.2 m | 6.5 kW | // |
Shark | 100 kg | 27 km/h | ||
Belgium | // | |||
BME Solar Boat Team | Monohull | 6.4 m | 15 kW | // |
// | 18 km/h | |||
Hungary | // | |||
Han Solar Boat | Hydrofoil | 5.8 m | // | Mechanically oriented foils |
100 kg | // | |||
The Netherlands | // | |||
Solar Boat Twente | Hydrofoil | 6 m | 6 kW | Electronically oriented foils |
Rising Trident | 120 kg | 30 km/h | ||
The Netherlands | 50 km/h | |||
Tecnico Solar | Hydrofoil | // | 2 × 5 kW | Hydraulically oriented real foil, counter-rotating propellers |
// | // | |||
Portugal | // | |||
Durban University | Trimaran | 5.1 m | 4 kW | // |
Siyamba | 180 kg | 18 km/h | ||
South Africa | // | |||
Adria Rijeka | Trimaran | 6.8 m | 8 kW | // |
Toredo Navalis | 79 kg | 35 km/h | ||
Croatia | // | |||
Swiss Solar Boat Dahu | Non-symmetric Catamaran | 7 m | // | Counter-rotating propellers |
Dahu | 200 kg | 24 km/h | ||
Switzerland | 45 km/h | |||
AGH University of Science and Technology | Hydrofoil | 6 m | 2 × 4 kW | // |
110 kg | // | |||
Poland | // | |||
DB20 | Hydrofoil | // | 10 kW | V-20 class, passive Hydrofoils, 1800 W PV panel, 1700 Wh battery |
200 kg | // | |||
The Netherlands | 35 km/h |
Reference | Name | Typology and Length | Motor Power and Speed | Solar Panel Power and Battery Capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[61] | Korona | Monohull | 2.2 kW | 900 W | Experimental prototype based on a hull not specifically designed for the scope |
7.2 m | 12 km/h | 12.6 kWh | |||
[63] | // | Catamaran | 10 kW | Solution for tourist navigation in areas where combustion engines are prohibited | |
14 m | 8–15 km/h | 90 kWh | |||
[64] | Solar Shuttle Boats | Catamaran | 2 × 8–2 × 18 kW | // | Among the first public transportation commercial boats that depended completely on solar power |
14–27 m | 12–15 km/h | 2 × 13.5–2 × 72 kWh | |||
[64] | Volitan | Monohull/sail | 150 kW | 10 kW | Concept of hybrid, rigid sail–solar boat. It has never been built |
32 m | 22–33 km/h | // | |||
[65] | // | Monohull | 2 × 0.3 kW | 100 W | Made to encourage the local community to change perspective about solar energy |
4.5 m | 2–6 km/h | 1.2 kWh | |||
[66] | // | Monohull | 2.7 kW | 1.4 kW | Small pleasure boat basically designed for day and weekend trips |
4.5 m | 7 km/h | 1.95 kWh | |||
[67] | // | Monohull | 500 W | 440 W | Low-cost design for coastal navigation without wave and tidal issues |
4.2 m | 5 km/h | 4.8 kWh | |||
[68] | // | SWATH | 2 × 20 kW | 12.6 kW | Zero-emission craft for Mediterranean coastal Marine Protected Areas |
15 m | 14.5 km/h | 96 kWh | |||
[69] | // | Catamaran | 9 kW | 8 kW | A leisure passenger catamaran operated in Taiwan with 42 person capacity |
14.5 m | 9 km/h | 34.5 kWh | |||
[70,71,72,73] | // | Catamaran | 10 kW | 8 kW | Concept of a medium size solar-powered recreational boat for tourism in Indonesia |
12.6 m | 8–11 km/h | 38 kWh | |||
[76] | // | Catamaran | 2 × 7.5 kW | 3.6 kW | Concept of a medium recreational boat for tourism in inland lakes in China |
14 m | 9–12 km/h | 34 kWh | |||
[79] | // | Monohull | 500 W | 300 W | Prototype of small personal leisure boat intended for Latvian rivers |
5.5 m | 6 km/h | 600 Wh | |||
[80,81,82] | Gènesis Solar | Catamaran | 2 × 10 kW | 4.2 kW | Public transport trajects for tourist in the protected environment of the Galapagos Islands |
15.4 m | // | 26 kWh | |||
[83] | E-tail | Monohull | 7.8 kW | 1 kW | Prototype of a traditional long-tail boat, used to transport tourists in Thailand |
13 m | 8–10 km/h | 4 kWh | |||
[85] | // | Catamaran | 2 × 10 kW | 4 kW | This boat operates on a dam lake for tourist activities in Turkey |
14 m | 6–10 km/h | 60–120 kWh | |||
[85] | Aquawatt 550 | Monohull | 0.8–1.6 kW | 0.4–1.6 kW | Commercial personal leisure boat for central European lakes |
5.5 m | 6–10 km/h | 5 kWh | |||
[85] | Aquawatt 715 | Monohull | 4 kW | 4.4 kW | Solar-powered version of a long-time popular electric boat |
7.15 m | 13.5 km/h | 17.5 kWh | |||
[85] | SolarWaterWorld SunCat 46 | Catamaran | 6 kW | 4 kW | Commercial traject boat for tourist, operating in Germany |
14 m | 8–10 km/h | 46 kWh | |||
[85] | Navalt Aditya | Catamaran | 2 × 20kW | 20 kW | Commercial large-size touristic ferry operating in India |
20 m | 13.5 km/h | 50 kWh |
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Minak, G. Solar Energy-Powered Boats: State of the Art and Perspectives. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11, 1519. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11081519
Minak G. Solar Energy-Powered Boats: State of the Art and Perspectives. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2023; 11(8):1519. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11081519
Chicago/Turabian StyleMinak, Giangiacomo. 2023. "Solar Energy-Powered Boats: State of the Art and Perspectives" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 11, no. 8: 1519. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11081519
APA StyleMinak, G. (2023). Solar Energy-Powered Boats: State of the Art and Perspectives. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 11(8), 1519. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11081519