ELECTRICITY GENERATION BY USING EXPERIMENTAL SETUP OF COMPRESSOR & TIDAL WAVES

Abstract View PDF Download PDF

##plugins.themes.academic_pro.article.main##

Santosh Sudhakar Tidke
Akash Mahadev Sonawane
Vaibhav Kumar Waghmare
Vishal Kumar Shinde
Prof. S.R.Joshi

Abstract

Tidal energy is renewable energy which exist in nature. so we are using tidal energy to compress the air which can be used later in many ways in which air will be compressed by cylinder and piston in which piston will be operated by waves. we are designing the structure which will be built in the sea where high wave deflection is generated in which the chamber will work as a cylinder and the wave will work as a piston the whole structure including sea wave will work as air compressor. On the structure there will be one inlet suction and outlet suction. Inlet suction will suck the air as waves goes downward andthen through outlet as waves come upward both suction will be attached to a one way valve to restrict one direction air flow in this way many chamber will attach to each other in series due to which we will get constant pressure difference in both suction inlet and outlet then that pressure difference or that energy can be used to generate the electricity through turbine.

##plugins.themes.academic_pro.article.details##

How to Cite
[1]
Santosh Sudhakar Tidke, Akash Mahadev Sonawane, 3Vaibhav Kumar Waghmare, Vishal Kumar Shinde, and Prof. S.R.Joshi, “ELECTRICITY GENERATION BY USING EXPERIMENTAL SETUP OF COMPRESSOR & TIDAL WAVES ”, IEJRD - International Multidisciplinary Journal, vol. 7, no. 3, p. 5, May 2022.

References

  1. Global Energy Statistical Yearbook 2014 (World Energy Primary Production). Retrieved from https://yearbook.enerdata.net/energy-primary- production.html#energy-consumption-data.html
  2. Rourke, F. O., Boyle, F., & Reynolds, A. (2010). Tidal energy update 2009.Applied Energy, 87(2), 398-409
  3. Koroneos, C., Spachos, T., & Moussiopoulos, N. (2003). Exergy analysis of renewable energy sources. Renewable energy, 28(2), 295-310.
  4. Watchorn.M., & Trapp, T. (2000). Tidal stream renewable offshore power generation (TS-Ropg). In World renewable energy congress (pp. 2664-2667).
  5. Owen, A., & Trevor, M. L. (2008). Tidal current energy: origins and challenges. Future energy. Oxford: Elsevier, 111-128.
  6. Mazumder, R., & Arima, M. (2005). Tidal rhythmites and their implications.Earth- Science Reviews, 69(1), 79-95.
  7. Westwood, A. (2004). Ocean power: wave and tidal energy review. Refocus,5(5), 50-55.
  8. Lee, K. S., & Seng, L. Y. (2013). Simulation studies on the electrical power potential harnessed by tidal current turbines. Journal of Energy and Environm

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Obs.: This plugin requires at least one statistics/report plugin to be enabled. If your statistics plugins provide more than one metric then please also select a main metric on the admin's site settings page and/or on the journal manager's settings pages.