How to Turn Ocean Power into Electricity

Berkeley researchers' Wave Carpet aims to compete with commercial energy converters

Written byThomas Walden Levy-UC Berkeley News Office
| 3 min read
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Ocean waves have vast energy potential. The Electric Power Research Institute estimates the total wave energy resource along the United States coastline at 2,640 terawatts per year. One terawatt can supply more than 93,000 typical US homes with power annually.

That potential hasn’t escaped the notice of ocean engineers, especially Reza Alam, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Berkeley since 2011. His research into how muddy seabeds absorb wave energy led him to explore how a mechanical device might convert that energy into electricity.

Related Article: Turning Good Vibrations Into Energy

Visiting graduate student Marcus Lehmann joined Alam’s Theoretical and Applied Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in 2012. Based on Alam’s research, Lehmann began designing a wave energy conversion device, now called the Wave Carpet. Four years later, the Wave Carpet team is moving from theory to practice.

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