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Energy Island Building, Image, Proposal, News, Information
Energy Island : Information + Images
Sustainable Maritime Architecture - Energy Generation
Architects: Dominic Michaelis + Alex Michaelis

Aerial view of Energy Island Module Centre, showing Otec Electric
power and desalinated water production plant room, with base of pole
of surface furnace receiving all radiation falling on roofs of factory
/ office / greenhouse buildings crowned by heliostat mirrors following
the sun, aerogenerators on the platform deck.

Alternative to platform-mounted aerogenerators, where generators are
placed at a suitable distance from an inhabited platform. These aerogenerators
have a prolonged tubular shaft below sea level, the bottom part of
which is ballasted, so that the aerogenerator, independently moored,
can't be blown flat, since all pressure on the blades is resisted
by the moment created by the shaft's displacement from the vertical.

Geotec: in this application, the energy island is placed above a geothermically
active area, in this case, a visible volcanic linear eruption along
a tectonic fault line. Octagonal turbogenerators are lowered by underwater
rovs, containing enough air to make them buoyant, so that they can
be anchored at a reasonable distance above the fault. They will be
using water at 300C or more as the heat source, umbrellas along the
line brining more hot water. The condensors use cold water at 5C drawn
in by long buoyant tubes. Generated electricity is cabled up to the
Energy Island.

Energy Island perspective view of a single hexagonal module showing
different energy converter systems and overall functional disposition.

Energy Island perspective view, showing the floating platform hexagonal
module surrounded on its wave front energy converters, in the lee
of which is the protected island, and behind that, a harbour serving
the island. To the left is a platform for staff housing, and at its
left extremity, a geothermal drilling rig, to which rise two electric
cables, one from the sea current turbines, another from a series of
turbines lowered down to recover geothermal energy from geological
fault lines resulting in very high water temperatures capable of efficient
electricity generation.

2 Otec Energy Islands with additonal module for high energy industrial
process factory, or for leisure combined with education facilities.

General view of Energy Island with overall functional diagram and
open cycle Otec system diagram.
Images from Dominic Michaelis May 2008

View along axis of 8 Otec modules supplying 2000 MWe, the equivalent
of a very large nuclear power station, and 2400 million litres of
desalintaed water per day, sufficient for 8 million US households.

Aerial view of linear array of 8 x 250 MWe Energy Islands forming
a 2000 MWe power plant, possibly electrolysed to hydrogen fuel, and
a desalination plant of 2.4 million cubic meters per day capacity
(total desalination capacity of the Kingdomof Saudi Arabia - 3 million
cubic meters per day).

Sea level view of 8 Otec 250 MWe Energy Islands with 2000 MWe power
output.

The Lilypad twin membrane wave energy converter consists of an upper
floating flexible membrane following the wave motion, provided on
its udnerside with load distributing flanges taking upward loads to
a number of linearly disposed fixation points to which are attached
arrays of hose pumps. Hose pumps operate on the principle that as
they are elastically elongated from their original large diameter
cylindrical shape, they gradually reduce in volume, pressurising the
working fluid within them.
At their base, the hose pumps are fixed to load distribution cables
which are in turn fixed to the bottom membrane, which is both weighted
and valved, so that it will resists upward movement as it is pulled
up by the passing wave, flexible flaps closing against a mesh below
them.
After the wave has passed, the bottom weighted membrane sinks downards
by gravity, the valves opening upwards, and returns to its initial
position, ready for the next cycle.
The hose pumps extend as the wave passes, expelling working fluid,
normally seawater, that runs to and along high pressure pipes to a
hydraulic generator. Electricity is generated typically at 65% efficiency
by a hydraulic trubogenerator. This mode prevails till the hose pump
is partially or fully extended by the wave crest. As the wave passes,
the upper membrane descends, gradually releasing pressure on the hose
pump, which elastically returns to its shorter and larger cylindrical
shape, drawing in seawater through a one way valve. This allows the
lower membrane to descend to its original position, ready for the
next upward stroke.
The membranes run perpendicularly to prevailing significant wave direction,
the size and length of hose pumps being related to wave length and
amplitude. Spacing of hose pumps and width of marine platform structure.
Sustainable Building News
Marine platform structures are designed to resist the impact of waves,
which vary in intensity from location to location. They must be capable
of resisting the strongest storms, and in some areas, rogue waves
that can reach twice the height of the strongest normal waves of that
location.
15 meter high waves are known to occur in many parts of the oceans,
and the corresponding rogue wave, occurring where currents are strong,
which may be a 1 in 1000 year chance, will reach 30 meters, the height
of a 10-storey building. In other more fortunate areas, where there
are no currents and no strong winds or cyclones, it might be 5, 10
tor 20 meters high.
A marine platform cannot be designed as a floating raft, because in
very heavy seas, its inertia will be such that it will not have time
to react to high wave onslaught, and risks being submerged.
The proposal presented is a minimal structure based on tetrahedral
geometry occupying the space where the wave impact and its energy
are deployed, the structure transferring to the platform the forces
from the buoyancy tanks that are in protected waters,
and insure the platform buoyancy, allowing the structure to rise or
to descend according to the amount of air with which they are fully
or partially filled.
The top of the buoyancy elements is shaped to resist the wave impact,
allowing the tetrahedral structure to be reduced in height. The shape
also makes it easier for the overall structure to rise if there is
some unforeseen upward pressure on the underside of the deck.
This section through two flexibly jointed juxtaposed marine platforms
illustrates the structural principle adopted, showing the upper tetrahedral
structure designed to be transparent to oncoming waves,
the buoyancy elements taking the point loads from the structure above,
and transferring the forces they exert through the tetrahedral structure
to the deck above. The buoyancy elements can be increased in depth
according to the loads carried by the deck, the tetrahedral structure
needing to be reinforced accordingly.
ENERGY ISLAND
The sea, the sea, ever renewed... Paul ValÈry
The Seas reveal many vast and diverse energy sources which are too
often considered individually, for instance the energies of wind,
wave, sea currents, tides, solar energy including marine photosynthesis,
geothermal and ocean thermal differential energy. Also, some renewable
energy sources, often converted on land, can be more efficiently sea
based, wind energy being a typical example, where land features reduce
its intensity and limit its locations. Land based wind farms have
proved themselves to be visually unacceptable to many, whilst solar
farms often occupy too much valuable land.
To best profit from the many renewable energy sources available at
sea, the concept is to create an Energy Island which would
take the form of a floating platform designed to harvest all usefully
available energy sources available to it, none acting in isolation,
but all being brought together so that each acts to complement the
other, adding its contribution to the whole.
A typical Energy Island may be of hexagonal shape plan,
of any size up to 500 meters along its shorter axis, having a surface
area of 22 hectares, the hexagonal shape allowing islands to be joined
in cluster or linear modes according to planning intents. Such an
island is designed to provide a total of 250 MW, with 1/3 of the energy
being contributed by ancillary sources and 2/3 by OTEC. It is designed
to intercept the following:-
Wave Energy. On the winward sides, the island features linear wave
energy converters, WECs, which can take the form of one of the many
different systems invented, whether the oscillating water column,
the lagoon, or another system, these converters playing
two parts, firstly protecting the island from the heavy seas, and
then providing hydraulic energy to the platform to induce fluid flows,
or to generate electricity. One new departure is the all flexible
twin membrane Lilypad WEC which Energy Island is promoting.
Wind Energy. Wind energy at sea is at its strongest, unaffected by
land masses. The Energy Island module is provided with
six large aerogenerators, three being at a lower level to intercept
the sea hugging wind flow, whilst three are higher to capture the
upper wind flows, the hydraulic masts being able to adjust the heights
of the aerogenerators to best harvest the wind potential from different
directions.
If they are unacceptable on the island because of electromagnetic
radiation, they can be floating ballasted structures moored independently
sufficiently far from the island.
Sea Currents. Sea currents are powerful energy sources and can be
interceped by nets made up of linear arrays of cowled
turbine units held up below the Energy Island by moored
buoys between which they are stretched, each unit having its own separate
flotation buoy, the array taking up a slight catenary curve under
pressure from the current, the main moored buoys having the capacity
to be relocated below the island to accomodate shifts in the current
direction. The array is positioned at a depth where it is little affected
by wave energy which is mostly expressed down to a depth equivalent
to 1/6 ths of its wavelength.
Marine turbines can be fitted to the base of the support platform.
Solar Energy. Solar energy at sea level is at 950 Watts/sq.m, when
the sun is directly overhead, and can be collected in many different
ways. The hexagonal plan of the Energy Island suggests
the possible use of a centrally located power tower furnace
onto which are focussed a field of orientable heliostats or mirrors,
giving furnace temperatures around 900_C which allow relatively efficient
electricity generation, with the possibility of waste heat recovery
above the boiling point of water, which can be used and stored to
assist thermal processes that are part of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion.
OTEC Electricity generation OTEC in tropical waters is the main electricity
generation source, with a combination of closed and open cycle systems
for efficiency at different temperatures combined with desirable sea
water distillation for a number of on board activities. All waste
heat from the solar farm is used to enhance a working fluid temperature,
the surface water being channelled to the centrally located power
plant along the six radial canals going to the outside apexes of the
hexagon where floating dark membrane solar collectors optionally enhance
the inlet temperatures. All warm and cold water pumping being carried
out uses the ancillary energy sources deployed, these measures to
increase Carnot efficiencies and to prevent OTEC from wasting the
energy it is itself generating.
OTEC seawater desalination OTEC, in certain configurations, will produce
vast amounts of desalinted water, often proportional to the electric
power generation capacity. In the open cycle mode, OTEC will produce
1,2 million litres of desalinated water per MW. This effectively makes
OTEC plants act as both power stations and desalination plants, effectively
doubling their value.
Geothermal Energy The Energy Island can be purposefully located above
geothermal energy resources. These can be tapped by drilling for hot
aquifers or pumping water through fissured hot rocks . Alternately,
hot volcanic flumes can produce water at 300_C that cannot boil because
of the high pressure, but into which can be lowered turbogenerators
using the cosiderable temerature difference from water drawn by arms
reaching out for nearby cold water, unaffected by the flumes, thzat
often follow linear tectonic faults.
Apart from its electric and desalinated water contributions, the Energy
Island is designed also to produce :-
Hydrogen. Because of the fluctuation of renewable energy resources,
an energy storage system is required. The Energy Island
relies on a hydrolysis plant to produce stored hydrogen and oxygen,
part of which can be used by fuel cell technology as necessary to
balance the power output, matching it to requirements both external
and internal, and part being used as a fuel that can , in some cases
be tankered or pipelined to other destinations, when the electricity
produced is not totally used by cable links to nearby destinations.
The Energy Island will also produce a base for:-
Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) and Mariculture.
In tropical latitudes, greenhouses need to be protected from the sun,
a role performed by the heliostats, and well ventilated or evaporatively
cooled. The 22 hectare platform can therefore be used for CEA, using
part of the distilled water from the open OTEC cycle for hydroponics.
If the floor is trellissed, light can reach the seawater below, where
pens can contain various forms of marine life below.
Harbours and Housing. On the leeward side of the island or islands,
The Energy Island needs to provide housing for staff ,
social facilities, workshops and harbours. Cold wter at 5_C can be
used for air conditioning.
Leisure and Tourism Energy Islands can be dedicated to energy self
sufficient holiday destinations, where also fish, fruit and vegetables
are produced on board, the islands having the advantage
of being located as desired close to attractions that can be reached
by boat, by helicopter, or by air, if a short landing strip is provided.
The Energy Island, intercepting many diverse renewable
energy sources, brings their converted powers together in the most
efficient way to provide electricity for the grid, and, by hydrolysis,
hydrogen fuel for transport to nearby or distant population centres,
where it can be used efficiently by fuel cell technology.
The Energy Island can become a major supplier of electricity
and hydrogen fuel for a pollution free society, and liberate the world
from the perils of nuclear power generation, and from its political,
economic and polluting dependance on dwindling fossil fuels, providing
vast amounts of desalinated water as a bonus.
The Energy Island constitutes a new departure, all the
more necessary because of the visible and invisible, but predicted
signs of universal pollution and global warming, and the frightening
fact that world energy use is expanding exponentially, having doubled
in the last thirty years.
Action is needed to bring about change, promote a new fuel and turn
the tide.
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Energy Island: page - adrian welch / isabelle
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Website: www.energyisland.org |
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