Safety design study for energy harvesters
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2023-10Metadata
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Original version
Gaidai, O., Yakimov, V., Wang, F., Xing, Y., & Zhang, F. (2023). Safety design study for energy harvesters. Sustainable Energy Research, 10(1), 15. 10.1186/s40807-023-00085-wAbstract
Modern offshore and onshore green energy engineering includes energy harvesting—as a result, extensive experimental investigations, as well as safety and reliability analysis are crucial for design and engineering. For this study, several wind-tunnel experiments under realistic in situ wind speed conditions have been conducted to examine the performance of galloping energy harvester. Next, a novel structural reliability approach is presented here that is especially well suited for multi-dimensional energy harvesting systems that have been either numerically simulated or analog observed during the representative time lapse, yielding an ergodic system time record. As demonstrated in this study, the advocated methodology may be used for risk assessment of dynamic system structural damage or failure. Furthermore, traditional reliability methodologies dealing with time series do not easily cope with the system’s high dimensionality, along with nonlinear cross-correlations between the system’s components. This study’s objective was to assess state-of-the-art reliability method, allowing efficient extraction of relevant statistical information, even from a limited underlying dataset. The methodology described in this study aims to assist designers when assessing nonlinear multidimensional dynamic energy harvesting system’s failure and hazard risks.