Initial situation
The cableKites system introduces a novel concept that adapts cableway technology for tidal energy harvesting. A key component of the system is the hydrofoil-shaped kite attached to the rope, which generates hydrodynamic forces that are transmitted to the rope and significantly influence the overall system behaviour. Based on the currently completed hydrofoil-shaped kite design, previous work within the project has focused on specific operating conditions.
However, detailed understanding of the fluid-dynamic behaviour of the kite under varying flow velocities, angles of attack, and dynamic loading conditions is still limited. In particular, a transferable description of the hydrodynamic forces suitable for system-level simulations and future coupling with rope dynamics is currently missing.
Objective and approach
This student work aims to investigate the fluid-dynamic behaviour of a single kite in water using numerical simulation methods. The focus is on analysing how hydrodynamic forces evolve under different operating conditions and on deriving force characteristics that are suitable for later coupling with rope dynamic models in system-level simulations.
The main tasks of this work include:
The work is ideally to be completed as a semester, or Master’s thesis, with the depth of analysis and level of modelling detail can be adjusted accordingly. Interested and qualified students are invited to submit a CV, transcripts, and a short motivation letter for the application.