Virginia Tech Mechanical Engineering Annual Report Annual Report 2016 | Page 32

Potential of ocean waves a siren call for energy engineers The ocean shows Lei Zuo, associate professor of mechanical engineering, the potential for abundant cheap, clean energy. In the United States, where 53 percent of the population lives within 50 miles of the coast, energy potential from ocean waves could make up 64 percent of the electricity generated from all sources in the country in 2010. That potential has Zuo excited, and he’s not alone. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) recently confirmed a $2 million grant for Zuo to produce a prototype new generation of ocean wave generator. “Virginia Tech is the best in the nation in the fields of energy harvesting and power electronics,” he said. The current project with DOE will see Zuo teamed with professors Robert Parker from mechanical engineering and Khai Ngo, the Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech; the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado; the Resolute Marine Energy company; and THK North America. The innovation at the heart of Zuo’s plan, is the Mechanical Motion Rectifier, a novel power takeoff that uses the up and down and back and forth oscillation of wave energy and turns it into a unidirectional rotation to drive the generator. The design, which also uses a ball screw and highly efficient power electronics, will be placed in a metal or composite housing, which is placed in the water in the same way as a buoy. Energy generation begins almost immediately as the waves move the buoy and the components inside. Compared to other renewables, ocean wave energy generates greater returns. A square meter of solar gives about 1.5 kilowatts; a square meter of wind generates about one kilowatt; and a meter of ocean wave front, power generation can be between 10 and 100 kilowatts.