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Design and Performance Evaluation of a “Fixed-Point” Spar Buoy Equipped with a Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting Unit for Floating Near-Shore Applications

Sensors 2021 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Damiano Alizzio, Antonino Quattrocchi Antonino Quattrocchi Marco Bonfanti, Carla Faraci, Nicola Donato, Carla Faraci, Carla Faraci, Nicola Donato, Carla Faraci, Carla Faraci, G. Grasso, Fabio Lo Savio, Nicola Donato, Roberto Montanini, Antonino Quattrocchi

Summary

Researchers designed and tested a scaled model of a spar buoy equipped with a wave energy harvesting system. While focused on renewable energy generation at sea, buoy technologies could also be adapted to monitor microplastic contamination in open ocean environments.

In the present work, a spar-buoy scaled model was designed and built through a "Lab-on-Sea" unit, equipped with an energy harvesting system. Such a system is based on deformable bands, which are loyal to the unit, to convert wave motion energy into electricity by means of piezo patch transducers. In a preliminary stage, the scaled model, suitable for tests in a controlled ripples-type wave motion channel, was tested in order to verify the "fixed-point" assumption in pitch and roll motions and, consequently, to optimize energy harvesting. A special type of structure was designed, numerically simulated, and experimentally verified. The proposed solution represents an advantageous compromise between the lightness of the used materials and the amount of recoverable energy. The energy, which was obtained from the piezo patch transducers during the simulations in the laboratory, was found to be enough to self-sustain the feasible on-board sensors and the remote data transmission system.

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