Abstract

This contribution deals with multi-objective model-predictive control (MPC) of a wave energy converter (WEC) device concept, which can harvest energy from sea waves using a dielectric elastomer generator (DEG) power take-off system. We aim to maximise the extracted energy through control while minimising the accumulated damage to the DEG. With reference to system operation in stochastic waves, we first generate ground truth solutions by solving an optimal control problem, comparing it to the performance of MPC to determine a prediction horizon that trades off accuracy and efficiency for computation. Fixed weights in the MPC scheme can produce unpredictable costs for variable sea conditions, meaning the average rate of cost accumulation can vary vastly. To steer this cost growth, we propose a heuristic to adapt the algorithm by changing the weighting of the cost functions for fulfilling the long-time goal of accumulating a small enough damage in a fixed time. A simulated case-study is presented in order to evaluate the performance of the proposed MPC framework and the weight-adaptation algorithm. The proposed heuristic proves to be able to limit the amount of accumulated damage while improving the energy yield obtained with a comparable fixed-weight MPC.

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