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Page added on August 23, 2007

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Harvesting Power from the Ocean

Researchers from SRI International, based in Menlo Park, CA, recently completed the first ocean tests of a system that uses a so-called artificial muscle to generate power from the motion of a buoy riding up and down on the waves. Although the prototype produces very little electricity, the researchers say that wave farms based on the technology could eventually rival wind turbines in power output, providing a significant source of clean energy.
Technology for harnessing the ocean’s energy already exists, but it has not been widely adopted, largely because it has trouble withstanding the pounding of the waves. The new system could prove both cheaper and more reliable, the researchers say.


Earlier systems used more-conventional electromagnetic devices, such as dynamos with complex transmissions, hydraulic pistons, and turbines. The gears of a transmission, in particular, are vulnerable to wear and tear from the erratic surging of ocean waves.


In contrast, the SRI system is not much more than a sheet of rubber attached to a weight. It has “the mechanical complexity of a rubber band,” says SRI senior researcher Roy Kornbluh. As a consequence, it is better able to absorb the shock of waves, says Yoseph Bar-Cohen, a senior research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena, CA. What’s more, Bar-Cohen adds, the materials that the system is made from are cheap, which could help it compete in price with other sources of electricity.

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