Tidal energy harnesses the power of ocean tides and can be captured through two main methods - tidal barrages and tidal current turbines. Tidal barrages utilize the potential energy of tides using dams and sluice gates, like the first tidal barrage built in La Rance, France in 1961. Tidal current turbines extract kinetic energy directly from moving tidal currents using submerged rotors, like prototypes tested at marine energy testing sites in Orkney, Scotland. While tidal barrages provide reliable energy, they are very costly to build and can impact marine life. Tidal current turbines are less intrusive but the technology remains immature and effects on the environment need further study.
Tidal energy harnesses the power of ocean tides and can be captured through two main methods - tidal barrages and tidal current turbines. Tidal barrages utilize the potential energy of tides using dams and sluice gates, like the first tidal barrage built in La Rance, France in 1961. Tidal current turbines extract kinetic energy directly from moving tidal currents using submerged rotors, like prototypes tested at marine energy testing sites in Orkney, Scotland. While tidal barrages provide reliable energy, they are very costly to build and can impact marine life. Tidal current turbines are less intrusive but the technology remains immature and effects on the environment need further study.
Tidal energy harnesses the power of ocean tides and can be captured through two main methods - tidal barrages and tidal current turbines. Tidal barrages utilize the potential energy of tides using dams and sluice gates, like the first tidal barrage built in La Rance, France in 1961. Tidal current turbines extract kinetic energy directly from moving tidal currents using submerged rotors, like prototypes tested at marine energy testing sites in Orkney, Scotland. While tidal barrages provide reliable energy, they are very costly to build and can impact marine life. Tidal current turbines are less intrusive but the technology remains immature and effects on the environment need further study.
Tidal energy harnesses the power of ocean tides and can be captured through two main methods - tidal barrages and tidal current turbines. Tidal barrages utilize the potential energy of tides using dams and sluice gates, like the first tidal barrage built in La Rance, France in 1961. Tidal current turbines extract kinetic energy directly from moving tidal currents using submerged rotors, like prototypes tested at marine energy testing sites in Orkney, Scotland. While tidal barrages provide reliable energy, they are very costly to build and can impact marine life. Tidal current turbines are less intrusive but the technology remains immature and effects on the environment need further study.
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Tidal Energy
by Lori DeLeon
La Rance tidal power plant in La Rance, France
What is tidal energy? Tidal power facilities harness the energy from the rise and fall of tides. Two types of tidal plant facilities. Tidal barrages Tidal current turbines Ideal sites are located at narrow channels and experience high variation in high and low tides. Basic physics of tides Gravitational pull of the sun and There are two high tides and two moon and the pull of the centrifugal low tides during each period of force of rotation of the earth-moon rotation of the earth. system. Spring and Neap tides depend on the orientation of the sun, moon, and the earth.
High spring tides occur when the
sun and moon line up with the earth. This occurs whether they are either on same or opposite side. Low neap tides occur when the sun and moon line up at 90 to each other. When a landmass lines up with the Flood Currents: currents moving in the direction of the coast. earth-moon system, the water Ebb Currents: the current receding around it is at high tide. from the coast When a landmass is at 90 to the earth-moon system, the water around it is at low tide. Tidal Barrage Two types: Single basin system- Ebb generation: During flood tide basin is filled and sluice gates are Utilize potential energy closed , trapping water. Gates are kept closed until the tide has ebbed Tidal barrages are typically dams built sufficiently and thus turbines start spinning and generating electricity. across an estuary or bay. Flood generation: The basin is filled consist of turbines, sluice gates, through the turbine which generate at flood tide. embankments, and ship locks. Two way generation: Sluice gates and turbines are closed until near the end of the flood tide when water is allowed to flow through the turbines into the basin creating electricity. At the point where the hydrostatic head is insufficient for power generation the sluice gates are opened and kept open until high tide when they are closed. When the tide outside the barrage has dropped sufficiently water is allowed to flow out of the Basin basin through the turbines again creating electricity. Double-basin system: There are two basins, but it operates similar to en ebb generation, single-basin system. The only difference is a proportion of the electricity is used to pump water into the second basin allowing storage. Current sites of tidal barrages La Rance, Brittany, France The first and largest tidal barrage power plant Constructed between 1961 and 1967. Situated on the Rance River. Contains 24 reversible 10 MW bulb turbines generating a capacity of 240 MW and a net power output of 480 GWh per year. Two- way generation system and pumped storage. Annapolis Tidal Generation Facility on the Bay of Fundy, Canada Constructed between 1981 and 1984. Generating capacity of 20 MW and a net output of 30 GW h per year. Further development is being considered in the Bay of Fundy. The EuropeanMarine Energy Centre Located in Orkney, Scotland. Comprises an area of 975 km2 and 70 islands. Tidal current turbines Orkney Islands could generate 18,000 GW h per Extracts kinetic energy from moving water generated by tides. year. Operate during flood and ebb tides. Operational since 2005. Consists of a rotor, gearbox, and a generator. Test center for full-scale These three parts are mounted onto a grid-connected prototypes support structure. There are three main of tidal current turbines. types: Monitor impact on the Gravity structure environment. Piled structure http://www.emec.org.uk/ti Floating structure dal_devices.asp Pros and cons of both tidal power facilities Tidal Barrages Mature technology that has been around for nearly 50 years. Reliable energy source. BUT High costs of construction Environmental impacts on marine life Low power output in comparison to other energy source like coal and nuclear power plants
Tidal Current Turbines
Able to utilize both ebb and flood tides. Tidal current turbines are not large massive dam structure. BUT Tidal current turbine technology is young in its development. Installation and maintenance challenges. Environmental impacts are still being tested. References Tidal energy update 2009 Applied Energy , Volume 87, Issue 2 , February 2010, Pages 398-409 Fergal O Rourke, Fergal Boyle, Anthony Reynolds http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos/evangeline_trail.htm http://www.emec.org.uk/