AUTHOR=Wei Yong , Yang Yang , Yang Yanyang TITLE=Multifield cavity-type revetment system for generating wave energy power and protecting the coast in Beibu Gulf, China JOURNAL=Frontiers in Energy Research VOLUME=Volume 13 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/energy-research/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2025.1633706 DOI=10.3389/fenrg.2025.1633706 ISSN=2296-598X ABSTRACT=Numerous wave-energy-enhancing systems (WESs) have been developed for advancing global marine energy development. However, WESs face several obstacles, including low efficiency, substantial efficiency fluctuations, and poor impact resistance. A cavity-type breakwater system that protects the coast and generates wave power generation functions was developed for deployment in Beibu Gulf, China, to address these obstacles. A full-chain energy conversion model encompassing wave dynamics, hydropneumatics, and electromechanical conversion was designed and used in physical experiments. A wave particle motion model was established using the three-dimensional nonlinear Stokes wave theory to study the wave characteristics. The improved Goda formula was used to calculate the impact force of the waves: a 55°-inclined breakwater panel generated a peak pressure of 215 kPa. A transient flow model was developed and applied for pressurized water channels showing that the single-impact flow rate was 12.7 m3/s with a channel diameter and length of 0.8 and 3.2 m, respectively. ANSYS Fluent fluid–structure interaction simulations were conducted, which verified that the air chamber pressure fluctuated between 18.6 and 248 kPa, the turbine speed stabilized at 1,120 ± 210 rpm, and the average annual output power per unit was 38.7 kW. A four-stage efficiency chain model was developed, achieving an overall conversion efficiency of 12.6%. Deploying 500 units in Beibu Gulf along with policy guidance could generate 274 million kWh of electricity annually, reducing the levelized cost of electricity from 0.453 to 0.422 CNY/kWh, with a payback period of 6.8 years. This study provides theoretical support and indicates the technical pathways for the coordinated development of coastal engineering and renewable energy.