Paper Title
Machine Learning Based Maximum Power Point Tracking in Tidal/Ocean Energy Conversion System

Abstract
In this paper, an efficient and supervised algorithm is presented to estimate a maximum power point (MPP) in Tidal/Ocean energy conversion systems by the implementation of machine learning (ML). Tidal energy extracted from the turbines depends on ocean current speed, tidal height, sea temperature, up cross period which most artificially intelligent algorithms such as neural networks ignore. Hill climb search is the most common and accurate methodology to track the maximum achievable power (MAP). However, the convergence speed to the maximum power point varies immensely and is slow. The proposed method uses machine learning to estimate a MPP using ocean current speed, sea temperature, up cross period and tidal height as input variables at every iteration. This MPP is then passed to the conventional hill climb search algorithm (HCS) to retrieve the MAP thereby reducing the perturbation time by a significant amount. At the end of each iteration, the machine learning algorithm is updated with the correct MAP thus avoiding overfitting which is predominant in artificial neural networks (ANN) and deep learning systems. The accuracy of the estimation increases after every iteration. Thus, for every tracked power point, the system is being trained recursively to predict an accurate MPP in the subsequent iterations. The simulation performed yielded an efficiency of 99.99% in estimating the MPP after 2500 iterations which corresponds to 9 hours of data. Index Terms - Artificial Intelligence, Hill climb search, Machine, Learning Maximum Power Point Tracking, Tidal energy conversion.