An affordable and customizable wave buoy for the study of wave-ice interactions: design concept and results from field deployments
Tsubasa Kodaira, Tomotaka Katsuno, Takehiko Nose, Motoyo Itoh, Jean, Rabault, Mario Hoppmann, Masafumi Kimizuka, and Takuji Waseda

TL;DR
This paper introduces a low-cost, customizable wave buoy using 3D printing technology, capable of long-term deployment in polar regions, with performance comparable to expensive instruments, enhancing wave-ice interaction studies.
Contribution
It presents a novel, affordable wave buoy design utilizing 3D printing for rapid customization and improved survivability, suitable for long-term polar deployments.
Findings
Performance comparable to expensive instruments in wave spectrum measurement
Successful deployment in Pacific and Arctic Oceans
Enhanced customizability and survivability of the buoy design
Abstract
In the polar regions, the interaction between waves and ice has a crucial impact on the seasonal change in the sea ice extent. However, our comprehension of this phenomenon is restricted by a lack of observations, which, in turn, results in the exclusion of associated processes from numerical models. In recent years, availability of the low-cost and accurate Inertial Motion Units has enabled the development of affordable wave research devices. Despite advancements in designing innovative open-source instruments optimized for deployment on ice floes, their customizability and survivability remain limited, especially in open waters. This study presents a novel design concept for an affordable and customizable wave buoy, aimed for wave measurements in marginal ice zones. The central focus of this wave buoy design is the application of 3D printing as rapid prototyping technology. By…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Marine and Coastal Research · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
