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Wind Energy 101

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Title: Wind Energy 101


1
Wind Energy 101
Joe Rand The Kidwind Project St. Paul,
MN joe_at_kidwind.org
2
Where do we get our electricity?
3
Wind Energy is the Fastest Growing Energy Source
in the World!!
US installed capacity grew a WHOPPING 45 in
2007!!!
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Why such growthcosts!
1979 40 cents/kWh
2000 4 - 6 cents/kWh
  • Increased Turbine Size
  • RD Advances
  • Manufacturing Improvements

NSP 107 MW Lake Benton wind farm 4 cents/kWh
(unsubsidized)
2004 3 4.5 cents/kWh
9
Wind Energy The Technology
10
Early WINDMILL in Afghanistan (900AD)
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Jacobs Turbine 1920 - 1960
14
Smith-Putnam Turbine Vermont, 1940's
15
Modern Windmills
16
Orientation
  • Turbines can be categorized into two overarching
    classes based on the orientation of the rotor
  • Vertical Axis Horizontal Axis

17
Vertical Axis Turbines
  • Advantages
  • Omnidirectional
  • Accepts wind from any angle
  • Components can be mounted at ground level
  • Ease of service
  • Lighter weight towers
  • Can theoretically use less materials to capture
    the same amount of wind
  • Disadvantages
  • Rotors generally near ground where wind poorer
  • Centrifugal force stresses blades
  • Poor self-starting capabilities
  • Requires support at top of turbine rotor
  • Requires entire rotor to be removed to replace
    bearings
  • Overall poor performance and reliability
  • Have never been commercially successful

18
Lift vs Drag VAWTs
  • Lift Device Darrieus
  • Low solidity, aerofoil blades
  • More efficient than drag device
  • Drag Device Savonius
  • High solidity, cup shapes are pushed by the wind
  • At best can capture only 15 of wind energy

19
Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines
  • Rotors are usually Up-wind of tower
  • Some machines have down-wind rotors, but only
    commercially available ones are small turbines

20
Types of Electricity Generating Windmills
  • Small (?10 kW)
  • Homes
  • Farms
  • Remote Applications
  • (e.g. water pumping, telecom sites, icemaking)
  • Intermediate
  • (10-250 kW)
  • Village Power
  • Hybrid Systems
  • Distributed Power
  • Large (250 kW - 2MW)
  • Central Station Wind Farms
  • Distributed Power

21
Modern Small Wind TurbinesHigh Tech, High
Reliability, Low Maintenance
  • Technically Advanced
  • Only 2-3 Moving Parts
  • Very Low Maintenance Requirements
  • Proven 5,000 On-Grid
  • American Companies are the Market and Technology
    Leaders

(Not to scale)
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Overspeed Protection Furling
24
Large Wind Turbines
  • 450 base to blade
  • Each blade 112
  • Span greater than 747
  • 163 tons total
  • Foundation 20 feet deep
  • Rated at 1.5 5 megawatt
  • Supply at least 350 homes

25
US Large Wind Manufactures
  • General Electric
  • Clipper

26
Wind Turbine Technology
North Wind 100 rating 100 kW rotor 19.1 m hub
height 25 m
Lagerwey LW58 rating 750 kW rotor 58 m hub
height 65 m
Enercon E-66 rating 1800 kW rotor 70 m hub
height 85 m
Boeing 747 wing span 69.8m length 73.5 m
North Wind HR3 rating 3 kW rotor 5 m hub
height 15 m
Enercon E-112 rating 4000 kW rotor 112 m hub
height 100 m
Comparative Scale for a Range of Wind Turbines
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Inside a Wind Turbine
29
Airfoil Shape
Just like the wings of an airplane, wind turbine
blades use the airfoil shape to create lift and
maximize efficiency.
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31
Yawing Facing the Wind
  • Active Yaw (all medium large turbines produced
    today, some small turbines from Europe)
  • Anemometer on nacelle tells controller which way
    to point rotor into the wind
  • Yaw drive turns gears to point rotor into wind
  • Passive Yaw (Most small turbines)
  • Wind forces alone direct rotor
  • Tail vanes
  • Downwind turbines

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Wind Farms
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Windfarm 2
36
Off-Shore Windfarms
37
Middelgrunden
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Wind Turbine Perspective
40
Twist Taper
  • Speed through the air of a point on the blade
    changes with distance from hub
  • Therefore, tip speed ratio varies as well
  • To optimize angle of attack all along blade, it
    must twist from root to tip

41
The importance of the WIND RESOURCE
42
Why do windmills need to be high in the sky??
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Calculation of Wind Power
  • Power in the wind
  • Effect of air density, ?
  • Effect of swept area, A
  • Effect of wind speed, V

Power in the Wind ½?AV3
R
Swept Area A pR2 Area of the circle swept by
the rotor (m2).
45
Importance of Wind Speed
  • No other factor is more important to the amount
    of power available in the wind than the speed of
    the wind
  • Power is a cubic function of wind speed
  • V X V X V
  • 20 increase in wind speed means 73 more power
  • Doubling wind speed means 8 times more power

46
Betz Limit
  • All wind power cannot be captured by rotor or air
    would be completely still behind rotor and not
    allow more wind to pass through.
  • Theoretical limit of rotor efficiency is 59
  • Most modern wind turbines are in the 35 45
    range

47
Wind Energy Potential
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51
Wind Farms in Southwest Minnesota
Buffalo Ridge
Buffalo Ridge
Worthington, MN
52
  • Wind Farms in SW Minnesota
  • North Shaokatan 11.9 MW
  • Shaokatan Hills 11.9 MW
  • Lake Benton II 103.5 MW
  • Viking 12 .0 MW
  • Chanarambie 85.5 MW
  • Moraine 51.0 MW
  • Woodstock 10.2 MW
  • Buffalo Ridge 25.0 MW
  • Ruthton 15.8 MW
  • Lake Benton I 107.2 MW
  • Lakota Ridge 11.2 MW

Southwest Ridge Total 433.2 MW
Minnesota Total 895 MW
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Wind Potential
Source U.S. DOE
55
Key Issues facing Wind Power
56
FACT
57
1980s California Wind Farm Older Technology
Higher RPMs Lower Elevations Poorly
Sited Bad News!
58
  • In the November-December Audubon Magazine, John
    Flicker, President of National Audubon Society,
    wrote a column stating that Audubon "strongly
    supports wind power as a clean alternative energy
    source," pointing to the link between global
    warming and the birds and other wildlife that
    scientist say it will kill.

59
Impacts of Wind PowerNoise
  • Modern turbines are relatively quiet
  • Rule of thumb stay about 3x hub-height away
    from houses

Go to Hull or Searsburg listen! Note
Searsburg turbines are older a bit louder than
many modern turbines
60
Tax Credits
  • No Federal Incentives for Small Wind Since 1985
  • Large Wind Supported with Production Tax Credit
    3 Yr. Renewal in the 2005 Energy Bill EXPIRES
    END OF THIS YEAR!!!
  • States have varying levels of support
  • NY 50-75 Support
  • ME 0
  • MA 20-50

61
Residential Small Wind Incentives
May 1, 2002
Tax Incentives Buydown
Local Option Tax Incentives
Contact your utility to see if you qualify for
the Renewable Energy Resources Program.
Contact your city or county to see if they offer
tax incentives for small wind systems.
Net Metering Only
Tax Incentives, Net Metering Buydown
Net Metering Buydown
Net Metering Local Option Tax Incentives
Tax Incentives Net Metering
62
Net Metering
63
Transmission Problems
  • 6.5 million customers
  • 330 generating units
  • Over 8,000 miles of transmission lines
  • 11 Interconnections
  • 28,100 MW of capacity
  • Peak demand 22,544MW

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Predicting Power Output
66
Siting and NIMBY
67
What do you want in your backyard?
68
Questions???
69
Joe Rand The Kidwind Project joe_at_kidwind.org
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