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Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Dec 26, 2015

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Ashley Stokes
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Page 1: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Wind Energy

Page 2: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Number of Blades: One• Rotor must move more

rapidly to capture same amount of wind– Gearbox ratio reduced– Added weight of counterbalance

negates some benefits of lighter design

– Higher speed means more noise, visual, and wildlife impacts

• Blades easier to install because entire rotor can be assembled on ground

• Captures 10% less energy than two blade design

• Ultimately provide no cost savings

Page 3: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Number of Blades: Two

• Advantages & disadvantages similar to one blade

• Need teetering hub and or shock absorbers because of gyroscopic imbalances

• Capture 5% less energy than three blade designs

Page 4: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Number of Blades: Three

• Balance of gyroscopic forces

• Slower rotation– increases gearbox &

transmission costs– More aesthetic, less

noise, fewer bird strikes

Page 5: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Blade Material: Wood

Wood– Strong, light weight,

cheap, abundant, flexible

– Popular on do-it yourself turbines

• Solid plank• Laminates• Veneers• Composites

Page 6: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Blade Material: Metal

• Steel– Heavy & expensive

• Aluminum– Lighter-weight and easy to

work with– Expensive– Subject to metal fatigue

Page 7: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Blade Material: Fiberglass

• Lightweight, strong, inexpensive, good fatigue characteristics

• Variety of manufacturing processes

– Cloth over frame– Pultrusion– Filament winding to

produce spars• Most modern large turbines

use fiberglass

Page 8: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Lift & Drag

• The Lift Force is perpendicular to the direction of motion. We want to make this force BIG.

• The Drag Force is parallel to the direction of motion. We want to make this force small.

Page 9: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Airfoil

Just like the wings of an airplane, wind turbine blades use the airfoil shape to create lift and maximize efficiency.

Page 10: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Twist & Taper• Twist from blade root to the tip is used

to optimize the angle of attack all along blade and result in a constant inflow along the blade span

• Taper is used to reduce induced drag and increase the L/D ratio

Page 11: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Tip-Speed RatioTip-speed ratio is the ratio of the

speedof the rotating blade tip to the speed

of the free stream wind.There is an optimum angle of attackwhich creates the highest lift to dragratio.Because angle of attack is dependant

onwind speed, there is an optimum tipspeed ratio ΩR

VTSR =

Where,Ω = rotational speed in radians /secR = Rotor RadiusV = Wind “Free Stream” Velocity

ΩR

R

Page 12: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Betz Limit • All wind power cannot be captured by rotor or airwould be completely still behind rotor and not allow more wind to pass through.• Theoretical limit of rotor efficiency is 59%• Most modern wind turbines are in the 35 –45% range

Page 13: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Calculation of Wind Power

– Effect of swept area, A– Effect of wind speed, V– Effect of air density,

R

Swept Area: A = πR2 Area of the circle swept by the rotor (m2).

Power in the Wind = ½ρAV3

Page 14: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Rotor Solidity

Solidity is the ratio of total rotorplanform area to total swept area

Low solidity (0.10) = high speed, low torqueHigh solidity (>0.80) = low speed, high torque

a

R

A

Solidity = 3a/A

Page 15: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

Small and Large Hydro Power• Power output• Large-hydro

– More than 100 MW feeding into a large electricity grid• Medium-hydro

– 15 - 100 MW usually feeding a grid• Small-hydro

– 1 - 15 MW - usually feeding into a grid• Mini-hydro

– Above 100 kW, but below 1 MW– Either stand alone schemes or more often feeding into the grid

• Height of Head– Below 3m– 3-40m– >40m

Page 16: Wind Energy. Number of Blades: One Rotor must move more rapidly to capture same amount of wind – Gearbox ratio reduced – Added weight of counterbalance.

• Power output• Efficiency• Land Requirements• Cost• Design• Ecological Disruption

Small and Large Wind Power