| |
High above ground level, at a height of about 1 kilometre, the wind is
hardly influenced by the surface of the earth at all. In the lower layers
of the atmosphere, however, wind speeds are affected by the friction
against the surface of the earth. In the wind industry one distinguishes
between the roughness of the terrain, the influence from obstacles, and the
influence from the terrain contours, which is also called the
orography of the area. We shall be dealing with orography, when we
investigate so called speed up effects, i.e. tunnel effects
and hill
effects, later.
Roughness In general, the more pronounced the
roughness of the earth's surface, the more the wind will be slowed
down.
Forests and large cities obviously slow the wind down
considerably, while concrete runways in airports will only slow the wind
down a little. Water surfaces are even smoother than concrete runways, and
will have even less influence on the wind, while long grass and shrubs and
bushes will slow the wind down considerably.
Roughness
Classes and Roughness Lengths |

Sheep are a
wind turbine's best friend. In this picture from Akaroa Spit, New Zealand,
the sheep keep the roughness of the landscape down through their grazing.
Photograph © 1998 Soren Krohn |
 In
the wind industry, people usually refer to roughness classes or
roughness lengths, when they evaluate wind conditions in a
landscape. A high roughness class of 3 to 4 refers to landscapes with many
trees and buildings, while a sea surface is in roughness class 0.
Concrete runways in airports are in roughness class
0.5. The same applies to the flat, open landscape to the left which has
been grazed by sheep.
The
proper definition of roughness classes and roughness lengths may be found
in the Reference
Manual. The term roughness length is really the distance above ground
level where the wind speed theoretically should be zero. |
|
Wind
Shear

This graph was plotted with the wind speed
calculator on the next page. It shows you how wind speeds vary in
roughness class 2 (agricultural land with some houses and sheltering
hedgerows with some 500 m intervals), if we assume that the wind is
blowing at 10 m/s at a height of 100 metres.
The
fact that the wind profile is twisted towards a lower speed as we move
closer to ground level, is usually called wind shear. Wind shear
may also be important when designing wind turbines. If you consider a wind
turbine with a hub height of 40 metres and a rotor diameter of 40 metres,
you will notice that the wind is blowing at 9.3 m/s when the tip of the
blade is in its uppermost position, and only 7.7 m/s when the tip is in
the bottom position. This means that the forces acting on the rotor blade
when it is in its top position are far larger than when it is in its
bottom position. |