NewEnergyNews More: A PROPER WIND FARM

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  • Wednesday, February 2, 2011

    A PROPER WIND FARM

    Johns Hopkins Study Examines Proper Wind Turbine Spacing
    Mark Del Franco, 27 January 2011 (Northamerican Windpower)

    "Researchers studying the wake effects on wind turbines at Johns Hopkins University have recently discovered that the output from wind turbines could be greatly increased if wind turbines were spaced at twice the distance than the industry standard.

    "Charles Meneveau, a professor and co-author of the study, says that placing wind turbines 15 rotor diameters apart - more than twice as far as current turbine layouts - could result in more cost-efficient power generation…"


    click to enlarge

    [Meneveau:] "We have been working on better understanding of the coupling of large wind farms with the entire atmospheric boundary layer…As a result of our computational fluid dynamics in the idealized geometries of the very large wind farm, we developed an improved understanding of the cumulative effects of wakes, coupled with the overall velocity profiles in the entire atmospheric boundary layer…[W]hen using the asymptotic model to ask about optimal spacing of the very idealized case of the infinite wind farm, the spacing ends up being about twice as large as current values…"

    "In mathematical analysis, asymptotic analysis is a method of describing limiting behavior…[R]esults are only applicable in the context of very large wind farms in an idealized setting…[Standard] models for large wind farm[s]…were based on simply the adding up of what happens in the wakes of single wind turbines…The new spacing model…takes into account interaction of arrays of turbines with the entire atmospheric wind flow."

    click to enlarge

    "The experiments were conducted in the Johns Hopkins wind tunnel, which uses a large fan to generate a stream of air. Before it enters the testing area, the air passes through an active grid - a curtain of perforated plates that rotate randomly and create turbulence so that the air moving through the tunnel more closely resembles real-life wind conditions.

    "…[W]hen results of the study were widely released, some resource assessment professionals were skeptical…[because it omits] the other real-world factors, such as working with landowners, electrical line and balance-of-plant costs…[But even skeptics say] the study has merits, particularly for the study on work on inter-turbine wake characteristics - how one turbine plays off another in the grid string…"

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