scholarly journals Aerodynamic Performance Enhancement Using Active Flow Control on DU96-W-180 Wind Turbine Airfoil

Evergreen ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amr M. Halawa ◽  
Basman Elhadidi ◽  
Shigeo Yoshida
2020 ◽  
pp. 0309524X2096139
Author(s):  
Fangrui Shi ◽  
Yingqiao Xu ◽  
Xiaojing Sun

In this paper, a three-dimensional numerical simulation of the aerodynamic performance of a horizontal axis wind turbine (HAWT) whose blades are equipped with a new active flow control concept called Co-Flowing Jet (CFJ) is carried out. Numerical results show that the use of CFJ over the blade suction surface can effectively delay flow separation, thus improving the net torque and power output of HAWT. Besides, this increment in the net power produced by the turbine is considerably higher than the power consumed by the CFJ. Thus, the overall efficiency of the HAWT can be greatly increased. Furthermore, influences of different CFJ operating parameters including location of injection port, jet momentum coefficient and slot length on the performance enhancement of a HAWT are also systematically studied and the optimal combination of these parameters to obtain the best possible turbine efficiency throughout a range of different wind speeds has been identified.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kewei Xu ◽  
Gecheng Zha

Abstract This paper applies Co-flow Jet (CFJ) active flow control airfoil to a NREL horizontal axis wind turbine for power output improvement. CFJ is a zero-net-mass-flux active flow control method that dramatically increases airfoil lift coefficient and suppresses flow separation at a low energy expenditure. The 3D Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations with one-equation Spalart-Allmaras (SA) turbulence model are solved to simulate the 3D flows of the wind turbines. The baseline wind turbine is the NREL 10.06m diameter phase VI wind turbine and is modified to a CFJ blade by implementing CFJ along the span. The baseline wind turbine performance is validated with the experiment at three wind speeds, 7m/s, 15m/s, and 25m/s. The predicted blade surface pressure distributions and power output agree well with the experimental measurements. The study indicates that the CFJ can enhance the power output at the condition where angle of attack is increased to the level that conventional wind turbine is stalled. At the speed of 7m/s that the NREL turbine is designed to achieve the optimum efficiency at the pitch angle of 3°, the CFJ turbine does not increase the power output. When the pitch angle is reduced by 13° to −10°, the baseline wind turbine is stalled and generates negative power output at 7m/s. But the CFJ wind turbine increases the power output by 12.3% assuming CFJ fan efficiency of 80% at the same wind speed. This is an effective method to extract more power from the wind at all speeds. It is particularly useful at low speeds to decrease cut-in speed and increase power output without exceeding the structure limit. At the freestream velocity of 15m/s and the CFJ momentum coefficient Cμ of 0.23, the net power output is increased by 207.7% assuming the CFJ fan efficiency of 80%, compared to the baseline wind turbine due to the removal of flow separation. The CFJ wind turbine appears to open a door to a new area of wind turbine efficiency improvement and adaptive control for optimal loading.


Author(s):  
Edward A. Whalen ◽  
Doug S. Lacy ◽  
John C. Lin ◽  
Marlyn Y. Andino ◽  
Anthony E. Washburn ◽  
...  

Wind Energy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 909-923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Wolf ◽  
Thorsten Lutz ◽  
Werner Würz ◽  
Ewald Krämer ◽  
Oksana Stalnov ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (04) ◽  
pp. 51-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Pechlivanoglou ◽  
C.N. Nayeri ◽  
C.O. Paschereit

This article describes the performance optimization of wind turbine rotors with active flow control. The active Gurney flap concept was tested in the wind tunnel under dynamic AoA variations to simulate unsteady inflow conditions. A high-deflection micro flap was actuated by four digital electric servos with a maximum deflection rate of 360°/sec. A custom code was created to allow dynamic AoA variations of the test wing with simultaneous dynamic force measurements. During the dynamic investigations, various control strategies were tested, starting from standard PID controllers with semi-empirical parameter tuning models to Direct Inverse Controllers with neural network tuning strategies and pure self-learning neural network controllers. The results of the closed-loop measurements using the manually tuned PID controller showed a reduction potential for the dynamic lift loads in the range of 70% as well as a stable controller behavior. The Direct Inverse Controller not only showed a load reduction of 36.8%, but also significant improvement potential with respect to its fine-tuning.


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