A Numerical Study of the Influence of Blade Profile and Solidity on the Performances of Vertical Axis Wind Turbines

Author(s):  
Okeoghene Eboibi ◽  
Louis Danao ◽  
Robert Howell
2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhijeet M. Malge ◽  
Prashant Maruti Pawar

Purpose Three different configurations of vertical axis wind turbines (VAWT) were fabricated by changing the storey height and their orientations. The purpose of this study is to find the effect of storey height and orientation on the performance of wind turbines. The multistory VAWT has three storeys. The first configuration had increased middle storey height, with 0–90-0 orientation of blades. Wherein the second turbine had equal storey heights. The third configuration had increased middle storey height with 0–120-240 orientation of blades. The blades were tested numerically and experimentally. Design/methodology/approach In this research work, prototypes of innovative multistory VAWT were built with different configurations and orientations. Three configurations of three-storey VAWT were fabricated by varying the height of storey of turbines. The orientations were made by keeping the storeys orthogonal to each other. Multistory VAWT was tested numerically and experimentally. ANSYS Fluent was used for computational fluid dynamic analysis of VAWT. K-epsilon model was used for numerical analysis of wind turbine. Experimentation was carried out in a wind tunnel for different tip speed ratios (TSR). Findings The three configurations of innovative multistory VAWT were tested numerically and experimentally for different TSR. It has been found that the VAWT with equal storey height had a better performance as compared to the other two configurations with increased middle storey height. The power coefficient of equal storey height VAWT was about 22%, wherein the power coefficient of turbines with reduced upper and lower storey height was between 5%–8% Research limitations/implications The research work of multi-storey VAWT is very novel and original. The findings of the research will contribute to the existing work done in the field of VAWT. This will help other researchers to have insight into the development of multistory VAWT. The effect of storey height and configuration of multi-storey VAWT is studied numerically and experimentally, which concludes that the performance of equal storey is superior as compared to other configurations. Practical implications The multi-storey concept of VAWT was developed to counter the problem of wind direction. The blades of each storey were arranged orthogonal to each other. This helped to harness wind power irrespective of the direction of the wind. This will make the VAWT more sustainable and financially viable for domestic use. Social implications The turbines are specially designed for remotely located housed in rural areas where the power grid is not yet reached. Users can install the turbine on their rooftop and harness wind power of 100 W capacity. This will help them to make their life easy. Originality/value This research work is very original and first of a kind. The multistory concept of the wind turbine was checked for the effect of storey height and orientations of blades on its performance. Different configurations and orientations of the vertical axis were designed and developed for the first time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (13) ◽  
pp. 5874
Author(s):  
Andrea G. Sanvito ◽  
Vincenzo Dossena ◽  
Giacomo Persico

Low order models based on the Blade Element Momentum (BEM) theory exhibit modeling issues in the performance prediction of Vertical Axis Wind Turbines (VAWT) compared to Computational Fluid Dynamics, despite the widespread engineering practice of such methods. The present study shows that the capability of BEM codes applied to VAWTs can be greatly improved by implementing a novel three-dimensional set of high-order corrections and demonstrates this by comparing the BEM predictions against wind-tunnel experiments conducted on three small-scale VAWT models featuring different rotor design (H-shaped and Troposkein), blade profile (NACA0021 and DU-06-W200), and Reynolds number (from 0.8×105 to 2.5×105). Though based on the conventional Double Multiple Stream Tube (DMST) model, the here-presented in-house BEM code incorporates several two-dimensional and three-dimensional corrections including: accurate extended polar data, flow curvature, dynamic stall, a spanwise-distributed formulation of the tip losses, a fully 3D approach in the modeling of rotors featuring general shape (such as but not only, the Troposkein one), and accounting for the passive effects of supporting struts and pole. The detailed comparison with experimental data of the same models, tested in the large-scale wind tunnel of the Politecnico di Milano, suggests the very good predictive capability of the code in terms of power exchange, torque coefficient, and loads, on both time-mean and time-resolved basis. The peculiar formulation of the code allows including in a straightforward way the usual spanwise non-uniformity of the incoming wind and the effects of skew, thus allowing predicting the turbine operation in a realistic open-field in presence of the environmental boundary layer. A systematic study on the operation of VAWTs in multiple environments, such as in coastal regions or off-shore, and highlighting the sensitivity of VAWT performance to blade profile selection, rotor shape and size, wind shear, and rotor tilt concludes the paper.


2016 ◽  
Vol 753 ◽  
pp. 102001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengshun Cheng ◽  
Helge Aagaard Madsen ◽  
Zhen Gao ◽  
Torgeir Moan

2020 ◽  
Vol 201 ◽  
pp. 104162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiantian Zhang ◽  
Zhenguo Wang ◽  
Wei Huang ◽  
Derek Ingham ◽  
Lin Ma ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 0309524X2097167
Author(s):  
Mohammed Shaheen

Recent researches have proven that mutual interaction between vertical axis wind turbines (VAWTs) results in enhancement in the average power coefficient. Efficient VAWT clusters have been created to provide wind farms having higher power densities compared to conventional horizontal vertical axis wind turbine farms. The created clusters adopted fixed pitch VAWTs in studying the mutual interaction in close vicinity. This paper extends the investigation of the mutual effect between variable pitch VAWTs in closely oriented turbine clusters. A numerical study is performed using commercial Fluent ANSYS code in order to study the effect of gap distances, phase shifts, and oblique angles for co-rotating and counter-rotating arrangements of two variable pitch VAWTs. The results showed improvement in the performance of two turbine clusters up to 26% compared to isolated turbines. Three turbine clusters are also tested numerically based on the results of the two turbine clusters. The created three turbine cluster represents a basic unit to construct a more efficient wind farm. The results of the developed three turbine cluster showed an increase in the average power coefficient by 38% higher than that of isolated turbines.


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