Press release

Kyocera and Nagasaki University Develop “Energy Harvesting Smart Buoy” to Collect Ocean Data

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Nagasaki University (President: Shigeru Kohno) and Kyocera Corporation (President: Hideo Tanimoto) announced their joint development of an Energy Harvesting Smart Buoy, which combines Nagasaki University’s tidal current power generation technology with Kyocera’s IoT technology to collect reliable ocean data. Prototype buoys can collect a wide range of data on the marine environment using self-generated energy. A pilot program gathered information from 21 sensors, monitoring everything from water temperature and humidity to current direction. Future development may include sensors for temperature-related salinity variation, chlorophyll turbidity, and temperature-related variations in dissolved oxygen concentrations, to name a few.

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Energy Harvesting Smart Buoys. Left: SLTT (Small Lens-type Tidal Turbines), Right: VTT (Vertical-axis Tidal Turbines) (Graphic: Business Wire)

Energy Harvesting Smart Buoys. Left: SLTT (Small Lens-type Tidal Turbines), Right: VTT (Vertical-axis Tidal Turbines) (Graphic: Business Wire)

Development Background

Marine pollution and climate change have become serious societal issues. To solve these issues and help create a more sustainable world, scientists need more reliable ways to monitor and visualize various sea conditions. However, maintaining a stable power supply is a big challenge for continuous data collection at sea. Therefore, Nagasaki University and Kyocera developed the “Energy Harvesting Smart Buoy,” which generates its own electric power for continuous ocean data collection using a tidal-current power generation system in the buoy. The new Smart Buoy combines tidal-current power generation technology from Nagasaki University and IoT-related technology from Kyocera. In addition, Kyocera has future plans to monitor fisheries and aquaculture, conduct ocean surveys, and more.

Outline of the Prototypes

A buoy equipped with a tidal-current power generation system supplies power to the Kyocera GPS multi-unit and connected sensors *1. The GPS multi-unit is a compact Kyocera IoT device, equipped with various sensors and antennas, compatible with GPS, GLONASS, and Michibiki *2 location tracking systems.

*1 Equipped with a general-purpose serial interface (RS-485), it can connect sensors according to application.

*2 GLONASS is a positioning system using Russian satellites. Michibiki is a Japanese satellite positioning system consisting mainly of quasi-zenith orbiting satellites.

Each prototype is equipped with two different tidal-current power generation systems:

SLTT (Small Lens-type Tidal Turbines) – The buoy and power generation are separate, and a diffuser is installed around the turbine. In addition to protecting the turbine, the diffuser has the effect of increasing the flow of water for better power generation.

VTT (Vertical-axis Tidal Turbines) – The power generation element is directly connected to the buoy. Its AI-guided design incorporates a tilted axis to optimize turbine rotation amid heavy ocean swells and waves.

 

SLTT

VTT

Size

Total: Approx. 1800mm

Buoy: 520mm ×500mm

Generator: 400mm ×507mm

Total: Approx. 910mm

Buoy: 520mm×500mm

Generator: 400mm×200mm

Weight

Approx. 32kg

Approx. 31kg

Battery

Tidal power generation + Secondary battery (54,000mA)

External sensor

Current meter

(Velocity, direction of flow, and water temperature)

Internal sensor

Temperature and Humidity/Acceleration/Charging current/Battery voltage/Leakage detection

Location information

GPS / GLONASS / Michibiki*2

Antenna

Built-in

Communication method

LTE* Cat.M1 (LTE-M)

Compatible band

B1/B8/B19/B26

SIM

nano SIM

Role of Each Organization

Organization Name

Role

Nagasaki University

Turbine design optimized for tidal-current power generation

Kyocera

Development of various sensor controls, power control, buoy design, cloud applications, and mobile applications

* PAL Co., Ltd., and Shinei Kogyo LLC., both of which are based in Nagasaki City, cooperated in the prototype manufacturing of the buoy.

Future Initiatives

To promote ongoing ocean monitoring, the companies are planning to support a water temperature-salinity sensor (temperature, salinity, and electrical conductivity), chlorophyll turbidity sensor (chlorophyll, turbidity, and water temperature), DO sensor (dissolved oxygen and water temperature), and an underwater camera. Performance and operation will be improved, along with a reduction in size and weight, in commercial versions. Kyocera will also build an IoT platform to store collected data, and ongoing testing will be conducted mainly in Nagasaki Prefecture.

Please see the details in the link below,

https://global.kyocera.com/news/2021/0801_kswa.html

*LTE is a trademark of ETSI.

About KYOCERA

Kyocera Corporation (TOKYO: 6971, https://global.kyocera.com/), the parent and global headquarters of the Kyocera Group, was founded in 1959 as a producer of fine ceramics (also known as “advanced ceramics”). By combining these engineered materials with metals and integrating them with other technologies, Kyocera has become a leading supplier of industrial and automotive components, semiconductor packages, electronic devices, smart energy systems, printers, copiers, and mobile phones. During the year ended March 31, 2021, the company’s consolidated sales revenue totaled 1.5 trillion yen (approx. US$13.8 billion). Kyocera is ranked #549 on Forbes magazine’s 2020 “Global 2000” list of the world’s largest publicly traded companies, and appears on “The World’s 100 Most Sustainably Managed Companies” listing recently compiled by The Wall Street Journal.