Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 April 2006
A series of experiments is described in which a fully submerged parallel-plate enclosure is subjected to regular incident waves. The resulting wave-interaction effects are defined in terms of a reflexion coefficient derived from wave-height measurements and a pressure coefficient derived from measurements of pressure in the depths of the enclosure. The latter parameter describes the pressure induced in the enclosure by the passage of regular waves above it and is of particular interest, at present, in having a bearing on the operation and performance of a sub-sea wave-energy converter currently under development. The outcome of these experiments is the partial verification of some recent theoretical work, including the demonstration of a pressure intensification at certain wave frequencies.
These experiments form part of a wider study concerned generally with the performance of immersed, pressure-driven, wave-energy converters.