Modern Wind Turbines: Bharati Vidyapeeth University College of Engineering, Pune
Modern Wind Turbines: Bharati Vidyapeeth University College of Engineering, Pune
Modern Wind Turbines: Bharati Vidyapeeth University College of Engineering, Pune
INTRODUCTION
Wind power is a major source of renewable energy. The first development of wind turbines to generate electricity began more than a century ago. Wind turbine technology has rapidly accelerated since the oil crisis of the 1970s due to the requirement for an alternative to the ever rising cost of fossil fuels. Governments are taking this very seriously, and have imposed ambitious targets for the proportion of energy to be generated from renewable sources. There is a much greater public awareness of the environmental damage and pollution from fossil and nuclear fuels. Renewable energy sources are freely accessible and essentially inexhaustible resources. They are non-polluting a wind turbine produces no carbon dioxide. The environmental impact is low, although there is sometimes public concern about the siting of wind turbines.
The practical limits for Cp are 0.46 for high speed two-blade and 0.50 for three-blade turbines.
POWER RATING
Power ratings for different wind turbine designs can be difficult to compare because there is no globally accepted industry standard for a consistent wind speed at which to measure their output. Manufacturers give power ratings of wind turbines for a chosen wind speed and efficiency. Instead of comparing manufacturers quoted power outputs it is better to compare swept rotor blade area. In fact, nothing tells you more about a wind turbines potential than its rotor diameter.
Without Gearbox
If we used an ordinary generator, directly connected to a 50 Hz AC three phase grid with two, four, or six poles, we would have to have an extremely high speed turbine with between 3000 and 1000 rpm. For a rotor of diameter 43 m the blade tip speed would then be more than twice the speed of sound, which is not feasible. The mass of the rotor of the generator has to be roughly in proportion to the amount of torque (moment, or turning force) it has to handle, making a directly driven generator too heavy and expensive to be viable. The practical solution therefore is to use a gearbox to connect the rotor to the generator. This converts the slowly rotating, high torque power from the wind turbine rotor to the high speed, low torque power, required for the generator with only a few pole pairs.
May Results.
Flexible pin technology providing uniform gear tooth, and bearing loading providing high actual bearing life. Torque protection of the gear train and rotating elements against wind gusts and grid lockout, resulting in high reliability. Considerably reduces the weight of the gear train. 20 tonnes for 3.4 MW 2, meters diameter. Allows synchronous or fixed induction generators to be used without full power converters. Allows all of the main power electrics and transformers to be placed on the ground further reducing the weight in the nacelle. Improves wind energy capture at low speeds by using a more aggressive wind turbine blade pitch and a variable ratio gearbox. High power density due to optimized gearbox.
A GEARLESS FUTURE
The philosophy that formed the basis for the advanced gearless technology of the wind turbine Less subsystems, more reliability Less moving parts, more energy Less maintenance, more savings.
WITH GEARBOX
GEARLESS
CONCLUSIONS
A new approach is needed to overcome conventional barriers and accelerate the development of more robust gearbox designs. The technology has to compete on cost of energy against other renewables and against conventional generation. It is preferred to have more offshore wind turbines because of the availability of higher average wind speed in comparison to wind speed over land. In accordance with our country, a heavy coal user, turbines will help in overcoming the reliance on polluting fossil fuel.
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