TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental investigation of the wake characteristics behind twin vertical axis turbines
AU - Müller, Stephanie
AU - Muhawenimana, Valentine
AU - Wilson, Catherine A.M.E.
AU - Ouro, Pablo
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was financially supported using seed funding from Cardiff University's GCRF QR Funding from the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales, under the project ?HEFCW GCRF Small Project SP111: A new technology of fish-friendly river turbines to provide renewable energy to impoverished isolated communities?. In addition, SM was funded as part of the Water Informatics Science and Engineering Centre for Doctoral Training (WISE CDT) under grant EP/L016214/1 from the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC). The authors are grateful to Dr. Aldo Benavides, Dr. Carlos Duque and Maxime Lazennec for the fruitful conversations about this research, and Paul Leach for his invaluable support to build the turbine prototypes and technical assistance during the measurements. Data underpinning the results presented here can be found in the Cardiff University data catalogue: http://doi.org/10.17035/d.2021.0134567672. Comments from the Editor and three anonymous reviewers are greatly appreciated.
Funding Information:
This research was financially supported using seed funding from Cardiff University’s GCRF QR Funding from the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales, under the project ”HEFCW GCRF Small Project SP111: A new technology of fish-friendly river turbines to provide renewable energy to impoverished isolated communities”. In addition, SM was funded as part of the Water Informatics Science and Engineering Centre for Doctoral Training (WISE CDT) under grant EP/L016214/1 from the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC). The authors are grateful to Dr. Aldo Benavides, Dr. Carlos Duque and Maxime Lazennec for the fruitful conversations about this research, and Paul Leach for his invaluable support to build the turbine prototypes and technical assistance during the measurements. Data underpinning the results presented here can be found in the Cardiff University data catalogue: http://doi.org/10.17035/d.2021.0134567672. Comments from the Editor and three anonymous reviewers are greatly appreciated.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/11/1
Y1 - 2021/11/1
N2 - Vertical axis wind and tidal turbines are a promising technology, well suited to harness kinetic energy from highly turbulent environments such as urban areas or rivers. The power density per occupied land area of two or three vertical axis rotors deployed in close proximity can notably exceed that of their horizontal axis counterparts. Using acoustic Doppler velocimetry, the three-dimensional wake developed downstream of standalone and twin vertical axis turbines of various shaft-to-shaft distances and rotational direction combinations was characterised in terms of mean velocity and turbulence statistics, with their impact on momentum recovery quantified. Results show that the wake hydrodynamics were more impacted by turbine rotational direction than lateral distance between devices for the range of lateral spacing considered. In the cases with turbines operating in a counter-rotating forward configuration, the wake mostly expanded laterally and attained the largest velocities that exceeded those in the single turbine case, with full momentum recovery at 5 turbine diameters downstream. The wake developed by the counter-rotating backward setup notably extended over the vertical direction, whilst devices rotating in the same direction featured the greatest lateral wake expansion with reduced velocities. Linear wake superposition of the single turbine wake provided a good representation of the mean velocity field behind twin-turbine setups. The presented results indicate that, in the design of twin-turbine arrays moving in counter-rotating forward direction, a lateral spacing of, at least, two turbine diameters should be kept as this allows the kinetic energy in the wake to be fully recovered by five turbine diameters downstream.
AB - Vertical axis wind and tidal turbines are a promising technology, well suited to harness kinetic energy from highly turbulent environments such as urban areas or rivers. The power density per occupied land area of two or three vertical axis rotors deployed in close proximity can notably exceed that of their horizontal axis counterparts. Using acoustic Doppler velocimetry, the three-dimensional wake developed downstream of standalone and twin vertical axis turbines of various shaft-to-shaft distances and rotational direction combinations was characterised in terms of mean velocity and turbulence statistics, with their impact on momentum recovery quantified. Results show that the wake hydrodynamics were more impacted by turbine rotational direction than lateral distance between devices for the range of lateral spacing considered. In the cases with turbines operating in a counter-rotating forward configuration, the wake mostly expanded laterally and attained the largest velocities that exceeded those in the single turbine case, with full momentum recovery at 5 turbine diameters downstream. The wake developed by the counter-rotating backward setup notably extended over the vertical direction, whilst devices rotating in the same direction featured the greatest lateral wake expansion with reduced velocities. Linear wake superposition of the single turbine wake provided a good representation of the mean velocity field behind twin-turbine setups. The presented results indicate that, in the design of twin-turbine arrays moving in counter-rotating forward direction, a lateral spacing of, at least, two turbine diameters should be kept as this allows the kinetic energy in the wake to be fully recovered by five turbine diameters downstream.
KW - River turbine
KW - Turbine array
KW - Turbulence
KW - VAWT
KW - Vertical axis turbine
KW - Wakes
U2 - 10.1016/j.enconman.2021.114768
DO - 10.1016/j.enconman.2021.114768
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85115738788
SN - 0196-8904
VL - 247
JO - Energy Conversion and Management
JF - Energy Conversion and Management
M1 - 114768
ER -