Offshore Renewable Energy Ocean Waves Tides And Offshore Wind

Download Offshore Renewable Energy Ocean Waves Tides And Offshore Wind PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Offshore Renewable Energy Ocean Waves Tides And Offshore Wind book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Offshore Renewable Energy: Ocean Waves, Tides and Offshore Wind

This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue "Offshore Renewable Energy: Ocean Waves, Tides and Offshore Wind" that was published in Energies
Offshore Renewable Energy: Ocean Waves, Tides and Offshore Wind

This book covers technical articles based on individual contributions from a number of authors working on offshore wind, wave and tidal energy research. Articles describing various aspects of offshore wind, wave and tidal energies including resource prediction, shape optimisation of energy converters, optimal design of rotors for cost reductions, numerical modelling of large scale array energy converters, numerical simulation of electricity converting machines, hybrid energy converters, control system for generators, farm interactions, assessing economic benefits, and energy production benefits have been included in this book. This book will find its use to researchers and industries working in offshore renewable technologies.
Renewable Energy from the Oceans

Author: Domenico P. Coiro
language: en
Publisher: Institution of Engineering and Technology
Release Date: 2019-08-12
There are many ways to harness the renewable and emissions-free energy available from the Earth's oceans. The technologies include wave energy, tidal and current energy, and energy from thermal and salinity gradients. In addition, offshore wind energy and marine (floating) solar arrays offer a possibility to exploit vast resources that are far larger than those available onshore. The potential capacities range from many hundreds of gigawatts to terawatts of generation. These technologies could contribute a significant part of the global electricity demand; they are particularly suitable for providing sustainable power to marine regions and island communities and nations.