Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
The primary benefit of a wind turbine lies in the recovery of kinetic energy provided by the wind. This electricity conversion device requires skills in various technical and scientific fields such as aerodynamics, mechanics, materials, electrotechnics, meteorology etc. This article aims at explaining the context of current machines (vertical and horizontal axis ones) and their evolution towards offshore, through several characteristics. Their working conditions and especially the rotor and blade designs (first step of energy recovery), as well as their location on site, are important parameters also described in this article.
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Read the articleAUTHOR
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Marc RAPIN: Graduate of ENSAM - Wind expert - Head of Innovation, ASTech Paris Région, France
INTRODUCTION
Wind turbines are a very old form of wind energy. However, their operating principles were not established until the beginning of the 20th e century, and it was not until the 1970s and 2000s in particular that we saw the development of today's wind turbines, with a major evolution in their use worldwide, in their size and power, and in their design for land-based applications. We've gone from small, isolated machines for pumping water to large, multi-megawatt wind farms connected to the grid.
Technological and scientific advances in various fields of engineering, including aerodynamics, structures, materials, electrical engineering, meteorology and control, have improved the efficiency and reliability of these machines. Three-bladed horizontal-axis wind turbines have gradually come to dominate the market, and now account for almost the entire market. These advances have also led to a significant reduction in the cost per kilowatt-hour of wind power, resulting in steadily increasing installed capacity in Europe, America and Asia. Offshore developments have opened up new markets and given new impetus to the design of very high-power machines.
This article provides an overview of all aspects related to wind power, covering, but not exhaustively, the topics involved and their specific features. In particular, it describes the energy conversion potential of a wind turbine rotor.
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KEYWORDS
blades design | rotor design | offshore location | working conditions
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Wind turbines
Bibliography
- (1) - GWEC - Global Wind Energy Council. - http://www.gwec.net
- (2) - SER - Syndicat des Énergies Renouvelables. - http://www.enr.fr ...
Events
Colloque national éolien: organized annually by France Renouvelables http://www.colloque-national-eolien.fr
WindEurope Annual Event: organized by the European Wind Energy Association WindEurope http://windeurope.org/events/
...
Software tools
Turbine simulation: OpenFAST (NREL), Bladed (DNV), Hawc2 (DTU), QBlade (TU Berlin), Ashes (NTNU)...
Offshore structures and dynamics simulation: OrcaFlex (Orcina), SIMA (SINTEF), Deeplines (PRINCIPIA), SESAM (DNV), ANSYS...
Wind simulation/location/production: WAsP (DTU), WindPRO (EMD), WindFarmer (DNV), Openwind (UL), WindSim...
Directory
Standardization and certification
Bureau Véritas, France http://www.bureauveritas.fr
DNV, independent certification body http://www.dnv.fr
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