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Ocean Engineering Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Ocean Engineering

Wave Energy Converter For Marine Vessels And Isolated Communities, Leo Kirshenbaum, Owen Pyle, Gage Howard, Charlie Camilli, Jonathan Ma, Emigdio Islas, Joseph Bonafede Jun 2023

Wave Energy Converter For Marine Vessels And Isolated Communities, Leo Kirshenbaum, Owen Pyle, Gage Howard, Charlie Camilli, Jonathan Ma, Emigdio Islas, Joseph Bonafede

Mechanical Engineering

California Polytechnic State University’s 2023 Marine Energy Collegiate Competition team, Surf Supply, has developed a floating dock that transduces wave energy into electricity. The following report aligns with MECC requirements, and our design changes since CDR are present in the User Manual in Appendix F. Our primary market research of the Blue Economy identified electric marine vessel charging and isolated communities as early adopters that could benefit most from the first generation of our wave energy converter (WEC). Surf Supply’s design concept provides a reliable, affordable, and renewable energy source that reduces dependency on conventional fossil fuels, allowing blue economy …


Coastal Wave Powered Reverse Osmosis System, Alexander Raymond Charest, Joeseph Daniel Camobreco, Tori Sweet, Sam Williams, Andrew Lepage, Devan Sack, Meagan Wiggin, Chelsea Kimball, Brendan Reagan Jan 2022

Coastal Wave Powered Reverse Osmosis System, Alexander Raymond Charest, Joeseph Daniel Camobreco, Tori Sweet, Sam Williams, Andrew Lepage, Devan Sack, Meagan Wiggin, Chelsea Kimball, Brendan Reagan

Honors Theses and Capstones

Part of the Marine Energy Collegiate Competition (MECC) is the optional Build and Test Challenge where teams are encouraged to build a portion of their proposed solution. After the conducted testing the laboratory results are compared to the simulated and calculated models. For the MECC the University of New Hampshire (UNH) team decided to use a wave energy converter to produce pressurized water. The pressurized water would be filtered through a reverse osmosis membrane to make it potable. Our system uses the power of the ocean waves to move a float up and down in heave motion. This motion drives …