L11 - Energy Sources - Wind
L11 - Energy Sources - Wind
L11 - Energy Sources - Wind
Course plan
Basic concepts of energy and thermodynamics Fossil fuels Climate change Energy sources
Nuclear energy Geothermal energy
Wind energy
Energy from the wind is derived largely from solar radiation
Wind power V3
Air density: = 1.201 kg/m3 Sea level Standard Temperature Standard Pressure
Only a fraction of the total theoretical power available in the wind is extractable! Even with ideal wind energy conversion, the maximum power transferrable is only 0.593 of the total power in the wind.
A large circular swept area must be used to generate any useful amount of power. For example, in a 10 mph wind, which is a light breeze, a swept area of 25 ft diameter would only realize the maximum theoretical value of 1.5 kW.
For a turbine whose swept area with a diameter D meters mounted directly onto a generator shaft
Both the large size of swept area and the high wind speed needed in order to generate large amounts of power!
Tip-speed ratio
In order to express the power coefficient in terms of both the upstream wind velocity V and the blade rotational velocity = /r
Good design requires that the maximum Cpm occur near to the rated value of rotational speed. = 2n/60, n (rpm)
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Solidity Factor
Defined as the total blade area of the rotor divided by the swept area normal to the wind.
A large area of wind to be intercepted by a small area of blade low solidity factor
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Shear stress at the surface of a solid cylindrical shaft of radius r0: fs = 2T/r03 [N/m3] Torque T in [Nm]
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Efficiency values
= 34% for large machines = 16% for small machines Large systems are more efficient than small systems!
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Gyroscopic forces
Yawing rotation Blade rotation Lightweight blades
10 mph
Vibrations
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2 MW wind machine
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3 MW machine
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Darrieus rotor
Must be in operation before the wind exerts a driving force on it With Savonius rotor or a startor-motor Low solidity factor Peak efficiency of about 35% Higher tip-speed ratio than a Savonius rotor
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Site requirement
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Wind Farm
Salkhit Wind Fram in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia $100M, expected to open in 2012 50 MW, to reduce 185,000 tonnes of CO2 1.6-MW wind turbines, 82.5-meter rotor and 80-meter hub height for IEC class IIa wind conditions Mongolia could support 1,100 GW of installed wind power capacity.
Challenges
Large area required Create ecological disruption May create aesthetic objections Localized sites Seasonal
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Questions?
1. A wind turbine of the two-blade propeller type is designed to have its maximum power coefficient value at a tip-speed ratio, TSR = 6, when the wind velocity is 25 mph. If the blade diameter is 100 ft, what is the recommended speed or rotation? 2. Wind turbine units are rated at 2 MW in a rated wind speed of 13 m/s. The stage efficiencies are Cp = 0.32, gb = 0.94, g = 0.96. What is the necessary swept area? If the rotor is a two-blade propeller (horizontal axis), what is the rotor diameter? 3. Lets assume that there are about 1500 land-based sites for wind machines with 3 MW capacity each, having wind speeds of 20 mph. What portion of the demand for electricity consumption of 400 TWh could be supplied?
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