Wind Tunnel Testing of Jets and Tabs for Active Load Control of Wind Turbine Blades

Author(s):  
Aubryn Cooperman ◽  
Matthew Brunner ◽  
Case (CP) Van Dam
2013 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jong-Won Lee ◽  
Joong-Kwan Kim ◽  
Jae-Hung Han ◽  
Hyung-Kee Shin

Author(s):  
Kenneth W. Van Treuren ◽  
Jason R. Gregg

The importance of renewable and alternative energy is rapidly gaining attention. A national goal of replacing 20% of the United States electricity generation with wind power by 2030 has been proposed but such an ambitious goal is dependent on many parameters. Improved aerodynamic performance of wind turbine blades is one parameter necessary to achieve this goal. Blade testing is traditionally done using 2D airfoils in a laboratory wind tunnel, developing the lift and drag coefficients, and then using this data to predict wind turbine blade performance. Dimensional analysis has been used successfully in design of rotating machinery such as pumps, developing a series of dimensionless pump parameters with which to scale a particular pump design to a larger or small size. These parameters lead to similarity or affinity laws which relate any two homologous states for two pumps that are geometrically and dynamically similar. Affinity laws could be applied to wind turbines however the conditions tested in the wind tunnel do not match what would be expected in a full scale wind machine. As with pumps, the laws would apply only if the model and full scale wind turbine would operate at identical Reynolds numbers and are exactly similar (i.e. relative surface roughness and tip conditions). Reynolds numbers in the model tests are smaller than those achieved by the actual wind turbines while the surface roughness of the model is generally larger. This leads to the need for empirical equations to predict performance. This paper examines current wind tunnel testing and the problems with scaling wind turbine blades. It also outlines a methodology to test 3-D model wind turbine blades in a wind tunnel. Blades are designed and manufactured according to existing criteria, mounted to a generator, and their performance is then tested in the wind tunnel. Challenges with wind tunnel testing as well as extrapolation of the wind tunnel data to actual applications will be addressed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 0309524X2110071
Author(s):  
Usman Butt ◽  
Shafqat Hussain ◽  
Stephan Schacht ◽  
Uwe Ritschel

Experimental investigations of wind turbine blades having NACA airfoils 0021 and 4412 with and without tubercles on the leading edge have been performed in a wind tunnel. It was found that the lift coefficient of the airfoil 0021 with tubercles was higher at Re = 1.2×105 and 1.69×105 in post critical region (at higher angle of attach) than airfoils without tubercles but this difference relatively diminished at higher Reynolds numbers and beyond indicating that there is no effect on the lift coefficients of airfoils with tubercles at higher Reynolds numbers whereas drag coefficient remains unchanged. It is noted that at Re = 1.69×105, the lift coefficient of airfoil without tubercles drops from 0.96 to 0.42 as the angle of attack increases from 15° to 20° which is about 56% and the corresponding values of lift coefficient for airfoil with tubercles are 0.86 and 0.7 at respective angles with18% drop.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1618 ◽  
pp. 032041
Author(s):  
Emmanouil M Nanos ◽  
Kutay Yilmazlar ◽  
Alex Zanotti ◽  
Alessandro Croce ◽  
Carlo L Bottasso

Proceedings ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (23) ◽  
pp. 1465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrés Meana-Fernández ◽  
Jesús Manuel Fernández Oro ◽  
Katia María Argüelles Díaz ◽  
Mónica Galdo-Vega ◽  
Sandra Velarde-Suárez

Wind tunnel testing of small-scale models is one of the most useful techniques to predict the performance of real-scale applications. In this work, the aerodynamic design and the construction of a small-scale model of a straight-bladed vertical axis wind turbine for wind tunnel testing has been performed. Using a double multiple streamtube model (DMST), different solidity values for the turbine and different airfoil geometries were compared to select the final design. Once an optimal design was selected, a numerical simulation using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) was performed in order to obtain a more precise description of the flow field as well as the performance of the model. Future work will comprise the characterization of the model and the comparison of the experimental and numerical results.


2012 ◽  
Vol 260-261 ◽  
pp. 125-129
Author(s):  
Xin Zi Tang ◽  
Xu Zhang ◽  
Rui Tao Peng ◽  
Xiong Wei Liu

High lift and low drag are desirable for wind turbine blade airfoils. The performance of a high lift airfoil at high Reynolds number (Re) for large wind turbine blades is different from that at low Re number for small wind turbine blades. This paper investigates the performance of a high lift airfoil DU93-W-210 at high Re number in low Re number flows through wind tunnel testing. A series of low speed wind tunnel tests were conducted in a subsonic low turbulence closed return wind tunnel at the Re number from 2×105to 5×105. The results show that the maximum lift, minimum drag and stall angle differ at different Re numbers. Prior to the onset of stall, the lift coefficient increases linearly and the slope of the lift coefficient curve is larger at a higher Re number, the drag coefficient goes up gradually as angle of attack increases for these low Re numbers, meanwhile the stall angle moves from 14° to 12° while the Re number changes from 2×105to 5×105.


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