Hybrid Offshore Wind and Wave Energy Systems: A Review

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Abstract

Against the backdrop of the global energy transition, the efficient exploitation of marine renewable energy has become a key pathway toward achieving carbon neutrality. Wind–wave hybrid systems (WWHSs) have attracted growing attention due to their resource complementarity, efficient spatial utilization, and shared infrastructure. However, most existing studies focus on single components or local optimization, while systematic integration of the full technology chain remains limited. This gap hinders the transition from demonstration projects to commercial deployment. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the technological evolution and key characteristics of offshore wind turbine (OWT) foundations and wave energy converters (WECs). Fixed-bottom foundations remain the mainstream solution for near-shore development. Floating offshore wind turbines (FOWTs) represent the core direction for deep-sea deployment. Among WEC technologies, oscillating buoy (OB) WECs are the dominant research pathway. Yet high costs and poor performance under extreme sea states remain major barriers to commercialization. On this basis, the paper summarizes three major integration modes of WWHSs. Among them, hybrid configurations have become the research focus due to their structural sharing, hydrodynamic coupling, and significant cost and energy synergies. Furthermore, the review synthesizes optimization strategies for both technology design and spatial layout, aiming to enhance energy capture, structural stability, and overall economic performance. Finally, the paper critically identifies the main research gaps and technical bottlenecks and outlines key development pathways required to achieve future commercial viability. These include the development of high-performance adaptive power take-off (PTO) systems, deeper understanding of multi-physics coupling mechanisms, intelligent operation and maintenance enabled by digital twins, and comprehensive life-cycle techno-economic and environmental assessments. Through this integrated perspective, the review seeks to provide a systematic reference for the development of multi-energy offshore systems and to support future progress in integrated energy utilization in deep-sea environments.

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