PHYSICS FA – 2 
ACTIVITY 
OCEAN THERMAL 
ENERGY 
CONVERSION
What is OTEC 
 OTEC, or Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, is an 
energy technology that converts solar radiation to 
electric power. 
 OTEC systems use the ocean's natural thermal 
gradient—the fact that the ocean's layers of water have 
different temperatures—to drive a power-producing 
cycle.
 OTEC uses the ocean's warm surface water with a 
temperature of around 25°C (77°F) to vaporize a working 
fluid, which has a low-boiling point, such as ammonia. The 
vapor expands and spins a turbine coupled to a generator to 
produce electricity. The vapor is then cooled by seawater that 
has been pumped from the deeper ocean layer, where the 
temperature is about 5°C (41°F). That condenses the working 
fluid back into a liquid, so it can be reused. This is a 
continuous electricity generating cycle. 
 The efficiency of the cycle is strongly determined by the 
temperature differential. The bigger the temperature 
difference, the higher the efficiency. The technology is 
therefore viable primarily in equatorial areas where the year-round 
temperature differential is at least 20 degrees Celsius 
or 36 degrees Fahrenheit.
 Half of the earths incoming solar energy is 
absorbed between the tropic of Capricorn 
and the Tropic of Cancer.
 1881: Jacques Arsene d'Arsonval, a French physicist, was 
the first to propose tapping the thermal energy of the 
ocean. Georges Claude, a student of d'Arsonval's, built an 
experimental open-cycle OTEC system at Matanzas Bay, 
Cuba, in 1930. The system produced 22 kilowatts (kW) of 
electricity by using a low-pressure turbine. In 1935, Claude 
constructed another open-cycle plant, this time aboard a 
10,000-ton cargo vessel moored off the coast of Brazil. But 
both plants were destroyed by weather and waves, and 
Claude never achieved his goal of producing net power 
(the remainder after subtracting power needed to run the 
system) from an open-cycle OTEC system. 
 1956: French researchers designed a 3-megawatt (electric) 
(MWe) open-cycle plant for Abidjan on Africa's west coast. 
But the plant was never completed because of competition 
with inexpensive hydroelectric power.
 1979: The first 50-kilowatt ( 
(kWe) closed-cycle OTEC 
demonstration plant went up at 
NELHA. 
 Known as "Mini-OTEC," the 
plant was mounted on a 
converted U.S. Navy barge 
moored approximately 2 
kilometers off Keahole Point. 
The plant used a cold-water pipe 
to produce 52 kWe of gross 
power and 15 kWe net power.
 1993: An open-cycle OTEC plant at Keahole Point, 
Hawaii, produced 50,000 watts of electricity during 
a net power-producing experiment. 
 This broke the record of 40,000 watts set by a 
Japanese system in 1982. 
 Today, scientists are developing new, cost-effective, 
state-of-the-art turbines for open-cycle OTEC 
systems, experimenting with anti corroding 
Titanium and plastics as rotor material. 
 The new designs for OTEC are still mostly 
experimental. Only small-scale versions have been 
made. The largest so far is near Japan, and it can 
create 100 kilowatts of electricity.
OPEN-CYCLE 
 Open-cycle OTEC uses the tropical oceans' warm surface 
water to make electricity. When warm seawater is placed in a 
low-pressure container, it boils. The expanding steam drives a 
low-pressure turbine attached to an electrical generator. The 
steam, which has left its salt behind in the low-pressure 
container, is almost pure fresh water. It is condensed back into 
a liquid by exposure to cold temperatures from deep-ocean 
water.
CLOSED-CYCLE (RANKINE) 
 Closed-cycle systems use fluid with a low-boiling point, such as 
ammonia, to rotate a turbine to generate electricity. Here's how it 
works. Warm surface seawater is pumped through a heat 
exchanger where the low-boiling-point fluid is vaporized. The 
expanding vapor turns the turbo-generator. Then, cold, deep 
seawater—pumped through a second heat exchanger—condenses 
the vapor back into a liquid, which is then recycled through the 
system.
CLOSED LOOP
HYBRID SYSTEM 
Hybrid systems combine the features of both 
the closed-cycle and open-cycle systems. In 
a hybrid system, warm seawater enters a 
vacuum chamber where it is flash-evaporated 
into steam, similar to the open-cycle 
evaporation process. The steam 
vaporizes a low-boiling-point fluid (in a 
closed-cycle loop) that drives a turbine to 
produces electricity.
ADVANTAGES 
 Low Environmental Impact 
 The distinctive feature of OTEC energy systems is that the end products 
include not only energy in the form of electricity, but several other 
synergistic products. 
 Fresh Water 
The first by-product is fresh water. A small 1 MW OTEC is capable of 
producing some 4,500 cubic meters of fresh water per day, enough to 
supply a population of 20,000 with fresh water. 
 Food 
A further by-product is nutrient rich cold water from the deep ocean. The 
cold "waste" water from the OTEC is utilised in two ways. Primarily the 
cold water is discharged into large contained ponds, near shore or on 
land, where the water can be used for multi-species mariculture 
(shellfish and shrimp) producing harvest yields which far surpass 
naturally occurring cold water upwelling zones, just like agriculture on 
land.
Minerals 
OTEC may one day provide a means to mine 
ocean water for 57 trace elements. Most 
economic analyses have suggested that mining 
the ocean for dissolved substances would be 
unprofitable because so much energy is 
required to pump the large volume of water 
needed and because of the expense involved in 
separating the minerals from seawater. But with 
OTEC plants already pumping the water, the 
only remaining economic challenge is to reduce 
the cost of the extraction process.
Artists rendition of a 400MW plant back in 
‘75
OTEC POWER PLANT
 The development of the Kalina Cycle which is 
significantly more efficient than the previous closed-cycle 
system based on straight ammonia. 
 The discovery that dissolved gases exchange more 
rapidly from seawater than from fresh water. This 
allows for more efficiency and lower costs for open-cycle 
OTEC and for fresh water production from 
seawater in a hybrid Kalina Cycle configuration as well 
as fresh water production in general. 
 The development of better heat exchangers and heat 
exchanger operation with respect to bio-fouling control 
(on the warm water side) and corrosion control.
THE FUTURE 
 Records available from experimental plants 
demonstrate technical viability and provide 
invaluable data on the operation of OTEC 
plants. The economic evaluation of OTEC plants 
indicates that their commercial future lies in floating 
plants of approximately 100 MW capacity for 
industrialized nations and smaller plants for small-island- 
developing-states 
 Small OC-OTEC plants can be sized to produce 
from 1 MW to 10 MW of electricity, and at least 1700 
m3 to 3500 m3 of desalinated water per day.
Ocean power

Ocean power

  • 1.
    PHYSICS FA –2 ACTIVITY OCEAN THERMAL ENERGY CONVERSION
  • 2.
    What is OTEC  OTEC, or Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, is an energy technology that converts solar radiation to electric power.  OTEC systems use the ocean's natural thermal gradient—the fact that the ocean's layers of water have different temperatures—to drive a power-producing cycle.
  • 3.
     OTEC usesthe ocean's warm surface water with a temperature of around 25°C (77°F) to vaporize a working fluid, which has a low-boiling point, such as ammonia. The vapor expands and spins a turbine coupled to a generator to produce electricity. The vapor is then cooled by seawater that has been pumped from the deeper ocean layer, where the temperature is about 5°C (41°F). That condenses the working fluid back into a liquid, so it can be reused. This is a continuous electricity generating cycle.  The efficiency of the cycle is strongly determined by the temperature differential. The bigger the temperature difference, the higher the efficiency. The technology is therefore viable primarily in equatorial areas where the year-round temperature differential is at least 20 degrees Celsius or 36 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • 4.
     Half ofthe earths incoming solar energy is absorbed between the tropic of Capricorn and the Tropic of Cancer.
  • 5.
     1881: JacquesArsene d'Arsonval, a French physicist, was the first to propose tapping the thermal energy of the ocean. Georges Claude, a student of d'Arsonval's, built an experimental open-cycle OTEC system at Matanzas Bay, Cuba, in 1930. The system produced 22 kilowatts (kW) of electricity by using a low-pressure turbine. In 1935, Claude constructed another open-cycle plant, this time aboard a 10,000-ton cargo vessel moored off the coast of Brazil. But both plants were destroyed by weather and waves, and Claude never achieved his goal of producing net power (the remainder after subtracting power needed to run the system) from an open-cycle OTEC system.  1956: French researchers designed a 3-megawatt (electric) (MWe) open-cycle plant for Abidjan on Africa's west coast. But the plant was never completed because of competition with inexpensive hydroelectric power.
  • 6.
     1979: Thefirst 50-kilowatt ( (kWe) closed-cycle OTEC demonstration plant went up at NELHA.  Known as "Mini-OTEC," the plant was mounted on a converted U.S. Navy barge moored approximately 2 kilometers off Keahole Point. The plant used a cold-water pipe to produce 52 kWe of gross power and 15 kWe net power.
  • 7.
     1993: Anopen-cycle OTEC plant at Keahole Point, Hawaii, produced 50,000 watts of electricity during a net power-producing experiment.  This broke the record of 40,000 watts set by a Japanese system in 1982.  Today, scientists are developing new, cost-effective, state-of-the-art turbines for open-cycle OTEC systems, experimenting with anti corroding Titanium and plastics as rotor material.  The new designs for OTEC are still mostly experimental. Only small-scale versions have been made. The largest so far is near Japan, and it can create 100 kilowatts of electricity.
  • 8.
    OPEN-CYCLE  Open-cycleOTEC uses the tropical oceans' warm surface water to make electricity. When warm seawater is placed in a low-pressure container, it boils. The expanding steam drives a low-pressure turbine attached to an electrical generator. The steam, which has left its salt behind in the low-pressure container, is almost pure fresh water. It is condensed back into a liquid by exposure to cold temperatures from deep-ocean water.
  • 10.
    CLOSED-CYCLE (RANKINE) Closed-cycle systems use fluid with a low-boiling point, such as ammonia, to rotate a turbine to generate electricity. Here's how it works. Warm surface seawater is pumped through a heat exchanger where the low-boiling-point fluid is vaporized. The expanding vapor turns the turbo-generator. Then, cold, deep seawater—pumped through a second heat exchanger—condenses the vapor back into a liquid, which is then recycled through the system.
  • 11.
  • 12.
    HYBRID SYSTEM Hybridsystems combine the features of both the closed-cycle and open-cycle systems. In a hybrid system, warm seawater enters a vacuum chamber where it is flash-evaporated into steam, similar to the open-cycle evaporation process. The steam vaporizes a low-boiling-point fluid (in a closed-cycle loop) that drives a turbine to produces electricity.
  • 13.
    ADVANTAGES  LowEnvironmental Impact  The distinctive feature of OTEC energy systems is that the end products include not only energy in the form of electricity, but several other synergistic products.  Fresh Water The first by-product is fresh water. A small 1 MW OTEC is capable of producing some 4,500 cubic meters of fresh water per day, enough to supply a population of 20,000 with fresh water.  Food A further by-product is nutrient rich cold water from the deep ocean. The cold "waste" water from the OTEC is utilised in two ways. Primarily the cold water is discharged into large contained ponds, near shore or on land, where the water can be used for multi-species mariculture (shellfish and shrimp) producing harvest yields which far surpass naturally occurring cold water upwelling zones, just like agriculture on land.
  • 14.
    Minerals OTEC mayone day provide a means to mine ocean water for 57 trace elements. Most economic analyses have suggested that mining the ocean for dissolved substances would be unprofitable because so much energy is required to pump the large volume of water needed and because of the expense involved in separating the minerals from seawater. But with OTEC plants already pumping the water, the only remaining economic challenge is to reduce the cost of the extraction process.
  • 15.
    Artists rendition ofa 400MW plant back in ‘75
  • 16.
  • 17.
     The developmentof the Kalina Cycle which is significantly more efficient than the previous closed-cycle system based on straight ammonia.  The discovery that dissolved gases exchange more rapidly from seawater than from fresh water. This allows for more efficiency and lower costs for open-cycle OTEC and for fresh water production from seawater in a hybrid Kalina Cycle configuration as well as fresh water production in general.  The development of better heat exchangers and heat exchanger operation with respect to bio-fouling control (on the warm water side) and corrosion control.
  • 18.
    THE FUTURE Records available from experimental plants demonstrate technical viability and provide invaluable data on the operation of OTEC plants. The economic evaluation of OTEC plants indicates that their commercial future lies in floating plants of approximately 100 MW capacity for industrialized nations and smaller plants for small-island- developing-states  Small OC-OTEC plants can be sized to produce from 1 MW to 10 MW of electricity, and at least 1700 m3 to 3500 m3 of desalinated water per day.