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Lecture 33

The wind power system consists of multiple wind turbines with essential components including a tower, rotor, electrical generator, and control mechanisms. Modern turbines are designed for variable-speed operation and require careful consideration of structural dynamics to optimize performance and safety. Additionally, various battery types, particularly lead-acid, are utilized for energy storage in renewable power systems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views6 pages

Lecture 33

The wind power system consists of multiple wind turbines with essential components including a tower, rotor, electrical generator, and control mechanisms. Modern turbines are designed for variable-speed operation and require careful consideration of structural dynamics to optimize performance and safety. Additionally, various battery types, particularly lead-acid, are utilized for energy storage in renewable power systems.

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Wind Power System SYSTEM COMPONENTS

The wind power system comprises one or more wind turbine units operating electrically in parallel. Each
turbine is made of the following basic components:
• Tower structure
• Rotor with two or three blades attached to the hub • Shaft with mechanical gear
• Electrical generator • Yaw mechanism, such as the tail vane
• Sensors and control
Because of the large moment of inertia of the rotor, design challenges include starting, speed control during
the power-producing operation, and stopping the turbine when required. The eddy current or another type
of brake is used to halt the turbine when needed for emergency or for routine maintenance. In a modern
wind farm, each turbine must have its own control system to provide operational and safety functions from
a remote location. It also must have one or more of the following additional components:
• Anemometers, which measure the wind speed and transmit the data to the controller.
• Numerous sensors to monitor and regulate various mechanical and electrical parameters. A 1-MW turbine
may have several hundred sensors.
• Stall controller, which starts the machine at set wind speeds of 8 to 15 mph and shuts off at 50 to 70 mph
to protect the blades from overstressing and the generator from overheating.
• Power electronics to convert and condition power to the required standards.

A. TOWER
The wind tower supports the rotor and the nacelle containing the mechanical gear, the electrical

generator, the yaw mechanism, and the stall control. Figure depicts the component details and
layout in a large nacelle, and Figure shows the installation on the tower. The height of the tower
in the past has been in the 20 to 50 m range. For mediumand large-sized turbines, the tower
height is approximately equal to the rotor diameter, as seen in the dimension drawing of a 600-
kW wind turbine Small turbines are generally mounted on the tower a few rotor diameters high.
Otherwise, they would suffer fatigue due to the poor wind speed found near the ground
surface. Figure 4.5 shows tower heights of various-sized wind turbines relative to some known
structures. Both steel and concrete towers are available and are being used. The construction
can be tubular or lattice. Towers must be at least 25 to 30 m high to avoid turbulence caused
by trees and buildings. Utility-scale towers are typically twice as high to take advantage of the
swifter winds at those heights. The main issue in the tower design is the structural dynamics.
The tower vibration and the resulting fatigue cycles under wind speed fluctuation are avoided
by the design. This requires careful avoidance of all resonance frequencies of the tower, the
rotor, and the nacelle from the wind fluctuation frequencies. Sufficient margin must be
maintained between the two sets of frequencies in all vibrating modes.
TURBINE
Wind turbines are manufactured in sizes ranging from a few kW for stand-alone remote applications to
a few MW each for utility-scale power generation. The turbine size has been steadily increasing. The
average size of the turbine installed worldwide in 2002 was over 1 MW. By the end of 2003, about
1200 1.5-MW turbines made by GE Wind Energy alone were installed and in operation. Today, even
larger machines are being routinely Department of Electrical Engineering, Veer Surendra Sai
University of Technology Burla Page 89 installed on a large commercial scale, such as GE’s new 3.6-
MW turbines for offshore wind farms both in Europe and in the U.S. It offers lighter variable-speed,
pitchcontrolled blades on a softer support structure, resulting in a cost-effective foundation. Its rated
wind speed is 14 m/sec with cut in speed at 3.5 m/sec and the cutout at 25 m/sec.

C. BLADES
Modern wind turbines have two or three blades, which are carefully constructed airfoils that utilize
aerodynamic principles to capture as much power as possible. The airfoil design uses a longer upper-
side surface whereas the bottom surface remains somewhat uniform. By the Bernoulli principle, a “lift”
is created on the airfoil by the pressure difference in the wind flowing over the top and bottom surfaces
of the foil. This aerodynamic lift force flies the plane high, but rotates the wind turbine blades about the
hub. In addition to the lift force on the blades, a drag force is created,
D. SPEED CONTROL
The wind turbine technology has changed significantly in the last 25 yr.1 Large wind turbines being
installed today tend to be of variable-speed design, incorporating pitch control and power electronics.
Small machines, on the other hand, must have simple, lowcost power and speed control. The speed
control methods fall into the following categories: No speed control whatsoever: In this method, the
turbine, the electrical generator, and the entire system are designed to withstand the extreme speed
under gusty winds. Yaw and tilt control: The yaw control continuously orients the rotor in the direction of
the wind. It can be as simple as the tail vane or more complex on modern towers.

SYSTEM-DESIGN FEATURES
When the land area is limited or is at a premium price, one optimization study that must be conducted
in an early stage of the wind farm design is to determine the number of turbines, their size, and the
spacing for extracting the maximum energy from the farm annually. The system trade-offs in such a
study are as follows:

TURBINETOWERS ANDSPACING
Large turbines cost less per megawatt of capacity and occupy less land area. On the other hand, fewer
large machines can reduce the megawatt-hour energy crop per year, as downtime of one machine
would have larger impact on the energy output. A certain turbine size may stand out to be the optimum
for a given wind farm from the investment and energy production cost points of view.
TYPES OF BATTERY
There are at least six major rechargeable electro-chemistries available today. They are as
follows:
• Lead-acid (Pb-acid)
• Nickel-cadmium (Ni-Cd)
• Nickel-metal hydride (Ni-MH)
• Lithium-ion (Li-ion)
• Lithium-polymer (Li-poly)
• Zinc-air
New electro-chemistries are being developed by the United States Advanced Battery
Consortium for a variety of applications, such as electric vehicles, spacecraft, utility load
leveling and, of course, for renewable power systems. The average voltage during discharge
depends on the electrochemistry,. The energy densities of various batteries, as measured by the Wh
capacity per unit mass and unit volume, are compared in Figure. The selection of the electrochemistry
for a given application is a matter of performance and cost optimization.
LEAD-ACID
This is the most common type of rechargeable battery used today because of its maturity and high
performance-over-cost ratio, even though it has the least energy density by weight and volume. In
a Pb-acid battery under discharge, water and lead sulfate are formed, the water dilutes the sulfuric
acid electrolyte, and the specific gravity of the electrolyte decreases with the decreasing SOC.
Recharging reverses the reaction, in which the lead and lead dioxide are formed at the negative and
positive plates, respectively, restoring the battery into its originally charged state.

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