Wind Turbine Blade Design
Joseph Rand
The Kidwind Project
joe@kidwind.org
Calculation of Wind Power
R
Swept Area: A = πR2 Area of the circle swept by the rotor (m2).
Power in the Wind = ½ρAV3
Many Different Rotors…
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Number of Blades – One
Number of Blades - Two
Number of Blades - Three
Blade Composition �Wood
Wood
Blade Composition�Metal
Blade Construction�Fiberglass
KidWind Project | www.kidwind.org
Guestimate how long a blade is?
What is unique or different about this design
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Lift & Drag Forces
α = low
α = medium
<10 degrees
α = High
Stall!!
Airfoil Shape
Just like the wings of an airplane, wind turbine blades use the airfoil shape to create lift and maximize efficiency.
The Bernoulli Effect
Lift/Drag Forces Experienced by Turbine Blades
KidWind Project | www.kidwind.org
Twist & Taper
Fast
Faster
Fastest
Tip-Speed Ratio
Tip-speed ratio is the ratio of the speed of the rotating blade tip to the speed of the free stream wind.
There is an optimum angle of attack which creates the highest lift to drag ratio.
Because angle of attack is dependant on wind speed, there is an optimum tip-speed ratio
ΩR
V
TSR=
Ω = rotational speed in radians /sec
R = Rotor Radius
V = Wind “Free Stream” Velocity
ΩR
R
Performance Over Range of Tip Speed Ratios
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
Rotor Solidity
Solidity is the ratio of total rotor planform area to total swept area
Low solidity (0.10) = high speed, low torque
High solidity (>0.80) = low speed, high torque
A
R
a
Solidity = 3a/A
KidWind Project | www.kidwind.org
Pitch Control Mechanisms
Some Wacky Ideas…
Manufacturing Blades
The blade mold (left) is lined with layers of fiberglass, then injected with epoxy resin. To enhance stiffness, a layer of wood is placed between the fiberglass layers. The two molds are joined and adhered together using a special liquid epoxy, which evenly joins the two sides of the blade.
Finally, the whole mold is baked like a cake! 8 hours at 70 degrees C.
Manufacturing Blades
Before delivery, samples of the rotor blades have to go through a variety of static and dynamic tests. First, they are subjected to 1.3 times the maximum operating load. To simulate 20 years of material fatigue, the blades are then mounted on special test beds and made to vibrate around two million times, before the endurance of the material is again tested with a final static test.
The blades are painted white, then shipped to wind farms all over the world.
Advanced Classroom Blades
Cardboard Tube for twisted blades
Airfoil Blades
Wind Turbine Blade Challenge
Questions?
Joe Rand
KidWind Project
joe@kidwind.org