This article presents a literature survey of research and development on floating wind turbines. The various, proposed conceptual designs for floating platforms used for floating wind turbines are described and the working principles of these various floater concepts are outlined. This is followed by an overview of the research work that has been undertaken pertaining to floating wind turbine technology by several research institutes and the academic community. The research work undertaken to date is reviewed categorically according to the proposed floater concept (spar-buoy type, TLP type, semi-submersible type, pontoon type and others) as per sections 3-7. Based on the research work undertaken thus far, recommendations for future work are suggested.
Trapped modes around a row of bottom-mounted vertical circular cylinders in a
channel are examined. The cylinders are identical, and their axes equally spaced in a
plane perpendicular to the channel walls. The analysis has been made by employing
the multipole expansion method under the assumption of linear water wave theory.
At least the same number of trapped modes is shown to exist as the number of
cylinders for both Neumann and Dirichlet trapped modes, with the exception that
for cylinders having large radius the mode corresponding to the Dirichlet trapped
mode for one cylinder will disappear. Close similarities between the Dirichlet trapped
modes around a row of cylinders in a channel and the near-resonant phenomenon in
the wave diffraction around a long array of cylinders in the open sea are discussed.
An analogy with a mass–spring oscillating system is also presented.
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