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result(s) for
"wind turbine"
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Blade Dimension Optimization and Performance Analysis of the 2-D Ugrinsky Wind Turbine
by
Luke Sakamoto
,
Koji Morinishi
,
Tomohiro Fukui
in
drag-type wind turbine
,
Efficiency
,
Equilibrium
2022
With the increasing focus on renewable energy, there is a need to improve the efficiency of vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs). The Ugrinsky wind turbine is a type of VAWT, but there are few studies on this turbine. Previous studies have shown that the maximum power coefficient of the Ugrinsky wind turbine reaches 0.170, which is 54.5% higher than that of the Savonius type (0.110), and this turbine maintains a high power coefficient over a wide range of tip speed ratios (TSR). In this study, the dimensions of the two semicircles of the Ugrinsky wind turbine were further optimized to obtain a higher power coefficient. An analysis of the effect of the blade dimensions on the performance was conducted. The flow around the turbine was simulated using the regularized lattice Boltzmann method. The geometry of the turbine was simulated using the virtual flux method for the Cartesian grid. The optimization was conducted in terms of the output power coefficient and the average value of the power coefficient for neighboring TSR to consider the fluctuation of the TSR. This study demonstrates that a closer vortex distance favored the growth of the vortex and improved the power coefficient.
Journal Article
A Study on a Casing Consisting of Three Flow Deflectors for Performance Improvement of Cross-Flow Wind Turbine
by
Miyaguni, Takeshi
,
Yoshihara, Ryo
,
Tanino, Tadakazu
in
Air-turbines
,
cross-flow wind turbine
,
Design and construction
2022
We investigated the effective use of cross-flow wind turbines for small-scale wind power generation to increase the output power by using a casing, which is a kind of wind-collecting device, composed of three flow deflector plates having the shape of a circular-arc airfoil. Drag-type vertical-axis wind turbines have an undesirable part of about half of the swept area where the inflow of wind results in low output performance. To solve this problem, we devised a casing consisting of three flow deflector plates, two of which were to block the unwanted inflow of wind and the remaining flow deflector plate having an angle of attack with respect to the wind direction to increase the flow toward the rotor. In this study, output performance experiments using a wind tunnel and numerical fluid analysis were conducted on a cross-flow wind turbine with three flow deflector plates to evaluate the effectiveness of the casing on output performance improvement. As a result, it was confirmed that the casing could improve the output performance of the cross-flow wind turbine by approximately 60% at the maximum performance point and could also maintain the output performance about 50% higher compared to the bare cross-flow wind turbine without the casing within a deviation angle of ±10 degrees, even when the casing direction was inclined against the wind direction due to changes in wind direction.
Journal Article
Advances in Wind Turbine Blade Design and Materials
2013
Wind energy is gaining critical ground in the area of renewable energy, with wind energy being predicted to provide up to 8% of the worlds consumption of electricity by 2021. This book reviews the design and functionality of wind turbine rotor blades as well as the requirements and challenges for composite materials used in both current and future designs of wind turbine blades. Part one outlines the challenges and developments in wind turbine blade design, including aerodynamic and aeroelastic design features, fatigue loads on wind turbine blades, and characteristics of wind turbine blade airfoils. Part two discusses the fatigue behavior of composite wind turbine blades, including the micromechanical modelling and fatigue life prediction of wind turbine blade composite materials, and the effects of resin and reinforcement variations on the fatigue resistance of wind turbine blades. The final part of the book describes advances in wind turbine blade materials, development and testing, including biobased composites, surface protection and coatings, structural performance testing and the design, manufacture and testing of small wind turbine blades This book offers a comprehensive review of the recent advances and challenges encountered in wind turbine blade materials and design, and will provide an invaluable reference for researchers and innovators in the field of wind energy production, including materials scientists and engineers, wind turbine blade manufacturers and maintenance technicians, scientists, researchers and academics.
Commercial Small-Scale Horizontal and Vertical Wind Turbines: A Comprehensive Review of Geometry, Materials, Costs and Performance
by
Perrotta, Achille
,
Rosato, Antonio
,
Maffei, Luigi
in
Alternative energy sources
,
Business metrics
,
Capital costs
2024
The effective exploitation of renewable energy sources is one of the most effective solutions to counter the energy, environmental and economic problems associated with the use of fossil fuels. Small-scale wind turbines (converting wind energy into electric energy with a power output lower than 50 kW) have received tremendous attention over the past few decades thanks to their reduced environmental impact, high efficiency, low maintenance cost, high reliability, wide wind operation range, self-starting capability at low wind speed, limited installation space, reduced dependence on grid-connected power and long transmission lines, low capital costs, as well as the possibility to be installed in some urban settings. However, there are significant challenges and drawbacks associated with this technology from many different perspectives, including the significant discrepancy between theoretical performance data provided by the manufacturers and real field operation, that need to be investigated in greater depth in order to enable a more widespread deployment of small-scale wind turbines. In this review, a complete and updated list of more than 200 commercially available small-scale horizontal and vertical wind turbine models is provided and analysed, detailing the corresponding characteristics in terms of the number and material of blades, start-up wind speed, cut-in wind speed, cut-out wind speed, survival wind speed, maximum power, noise level, rotor diameter, turbine length, tower height, and specific capital cost. In addition, several scientific papers focusing on the experimental assessment of field performance of commercially available small-scale horizontal and vertical wind turbines have been reviewed and the corresponding measured data have been compared with the rated performance derived from the manufacturers’ datasheets in order to underline the discrepancies. This review represents an opportunity for the scientific community to have a clear and up-to-date picture of small-scale horizontal as well as vertical wind turbines on the market today, with a precise summary of their geometric, performance, and economic characteristics, which can enable a more accurate and informed choice of the wind turbine to be used depending on the application. It also describes the differences between theoretical and in-situ performance, emphasizing the need for further experimental research and highlighting the direction in which future studies should be directed for more efficient design and use of building-integrated small-scale wind turbines.
Journal Article
Verification and Validation of Model-Scale Turbine Performance and Control Strategies for the IEA Wind 15 MW Reference Wind Turbine
2022
To enable the fast growth of the floating offshore wind industry, simulation models must be validated with experimental data. Floating wind model-scale experiments in wind–wave facilities have been performed over the last two decades with varying levels of fidelity and limitations. However, the turbine controls in these experiments have considered only limited control strategies and implementations. To allow for control co-design, this research focuses on implementing and experimentally validating more advanced turbine control actions and strategies in a wind–wave basin for a 1:70-scale model of the International Energy Agency’s wind 15 MW reference wind turbine. The control strategies analyzed include torque control, collective pitch control, and transition region control (setpoint smoothing). Our experimental and numerical results include the effects of varying rotor speeds, blade pitches, and wind environments on the turbine thrust and torque. Numerical models from three different software tools are presented and compared to the experimental results. Their ability to effectively represent the aero-dynamic response of the wind turbine to the control actions is successfully validated. Finally, turbine controller tuning parameters based on the derivatives of thrust and torque are derived to allow for improved offshore wind turbine dynamics and to validate the ability of modeling tools to model the dynamics of floating offshore wind turbines with control co-design.
Journal Article
Materials for Wind Turbine Blades: An Overview
by
Beauson, Justine
,
Mishnaevsky, Leon
,
McGugan, Malcolm
in
Composite materials
,
Epoxy matrix composites
,
Glass fiber reinforced plastics
2017
A short overview of composite materials for wind turbine applications is presented here. Requirements toward the wind turbine materials, loads, as well as available materials are reviewed. Apart from the traditional composites for wind turbine blades (glass fibers/epoxy matrix composites), natural composites, hybrid and nanoengineered composites are discussed. Manufacturing technologies for wind turbine composites, as well their testing and modelling approaches are reviewed.
Journal Article
Wind turbine icing characteristics and icing-induced power losses to utility-scale wind turbines
2021
A field campaign was carried out to investigate ice accretion features on large turbine blades (50 m in length) and to assess power output losses of utility-scale wind turbines induced by ice accretion. After a 30-h icing incident, a high-resolution digital camera carried by an unmanned aircraft system was used to capture photographs of iced turbine blades. Based on the obtained pictures of the frozen blades, the ice layer thickness accreted along the blades’ leading edges was determined quantitatively. While ice was found to accumulate over whole blade spans, outboard blades had more ice structures, with ice layers reaching up to 0.3 m thick toward the blade tips. With the turbine operating data provided by the turbines’ supervisory control and data acquisition systems, icing-induced power output losses were investigated systematically. Despite the high wind, frozen turbines were discovered to rotate substantially slower and even shut down from time to time, resulting in up to 80% of icing-induced turbine power losses during the icing event. The research presented here is a comprehensive field campaign to characterize ice accretion features on full-scaled turbine blades and systematically analyze detrimental impacts of ice accumulation on the power generation of utility-scale wind turbines. The research findings are very useful in bridging the gaps between fundamental icing physics research carried out in highly idealized laboratory settings and the realistic icing phenomena observed on utility-scale wind turbines operating in harsh natural icing conditions.
Journal Article
Study on the efficiency of small-scale wind turbine with rotor adapted for low wind speeds
2024
This article aims to present the results of tunnel tests and field tests of small-scale horizontal-axis wind turbines. The article proposes a new concept of turbine rotor adapted to improve efficiency at low wind speeds. The methodology for calculating the rotor and generator is shown. The turbine construction solution is presented briefly, along with the technology for manufacturing turbine components and assembly. An analysis of the obtained results is also conducted.
Journal Article
Wind-Turbine and Wind-Farm Flows: A Review
by
Bastankhah Majid
,
Shamsoddin Sina
,
Fernando, Porté-Agel
in
Atmospheric boundary layer
,
Boundary layers
,
Climate change
2020
Wind energy, together with other renewable energy sources, are expected to grow substantially in the coming decades and play a key role in mitigating climate change and achieving energy sustainability. One of the main challenges in optimizing the design, operation, control, and grid integration of wind farms is the prediction of their performance, owing to the complex multiscale two-way interactions between wind farms and the turbulent atmospheric boundary layer (ABL). From a fluid mechanical perspective, these interactions are complicated by the high Reynolds number of the ABL flow, its inherent unsteadiness due to the diurnal cycle and synoptic-forcing variability, the ubiquitous nature of thermal effects, and the heterogeneity of the terrain. Particularly important is the effect of ABL turbulence on wind-turbine wake flows and their superposition, as they are responsible for considerable turbine power losses and fatigue loads in wind farms. These flow interactions affect, in turn, the structure of the ABL and the turbulent fluxes of momentum and scalars. This review summarizes recent experimental, computational, and theoretical research efforts that have contributed to improving our understanding and ability to predict the interactions of ABL flow with wind turbines and wind farms.
Journal Article
Increasing the Power Production of Vertical-Axis Wind-Turbine Farms Using Synergistic Clustering
by
Martinelli, Luigi
,
Cortina, Gerard
,
Seyed Hossein Hezaveh
in
Clustering
,
Computer simulation
,
Configurations
2018
Vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs) are being reconsidered as a complementary technology to the more widely used horizontal-axis wind turbines (HAWTs) due to their unique suitability for offshore deployments. In addition, field experiments have confirmed that vertical-axis wind turbines can interact synergistically to enhance the total power production when placed in close proximity. Here, we use an actuator line model in a large-eddy simulation to test novel VAWT farm configurations that exploit these synergistic interactions. We first design clusters with three turbines each that preserve the omni-directionality of vertical-axis wind turbines, and optimize the distance between the clustered turbines. We then configure farms based on clusters, rather than individual turbines. The simulations confirm that vertical-axis wind turbines have a positive influence on each other when packed in well-designed clusters: such configurations increase the power generation of a single turbine by about 10 percent. In addition, the cluster designs allow for closer turbine spacing resulting in about three times the number of turbines for a given land area compared to conventional configurations. Therefore, both the turbine and wind-farm efficiencies are improved, leading to a significant increase in the density of power production per unit land area.
Journal Article