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Wind
Turbines:
Horizontal or Vertical Axis Machines?
 Horizontal
Axis Wind Turbines Most of the technology described on these
pages is related to horizontal axis wind turbines (HAWTs, as some people
like to call them).
The reason is simple: All grid-connected
commercial wind turbines today are built with a propeller-type rotor on a
horizontal axis (i.e. a horizontal main shaft).
The purpose of the rotor, of course, is to
convert the linear motion of the wind into rotational energy that can be
used to drive a generator. The same basic principle is used in a modern
water turbine, where the flow of water is parallel to the rotational axis
of the turbine blades.
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Eole C, a 4200
kW Vertical axis Darrieus wind turbine with 100 m rotor diameter
at Cap Chat, Qu¨¦bec, Canada. The machine (which is the world's largest
wind turbine) is no longer operational.
Photograph
© 1997 Soren Krohn
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Vertical Axis
Wind Turbines
 As you will probably recall, classical water
wheels let the water arrive at a right angle (perpendicular) to the
rotational axis (shaft) of the water wheel.
Vertical axis wind turbines (VAWTs as some
people call them) are a bit like water wheels in that sense. (Some
vertical axis turbine types could actually work with a horizontal axis as
well, but they would hardly be able to beat the efficiency of a
propeller-type turbine).
The only vertical axis turbine which has ever
been manufactured commercially at any volume is the Darrieus
machine, named after the French engineer Georges Darrieus who patented
the design in 1931. (It was manufactured by the U.S. company FloWind which
went bankrupt in 1997). The Darrieus machine is characterised by its
C-shaped rotor blades which make it look a bit like an eggbeater. It is
normally built with two or three blades.
The basic theoretical advantages of a vertical
axis machine are 1) you may place the generator, gearbox etc. on the
ground, and you may not need a tower for the machine. 2) you do not
need a yaw mechanism to turn the rotor against the wind.
The basic disadvantages are 1) Wind speeds
are very low close to ground level, so although you may save a tower, your
wind speeds will be very low on the lower part of your rotor. 2) The
overall efficiency of the vertical axis machines is not impressive. 3)
The machine is not self-starting (e.g. a Darrieus machine will need a
"push" before it starts. This is only a minor inconvenience for a grid
connected turbine, however, since you may use the generator as a motor
drawing current from the grid to to start the machine). 4) The machine
may need guy wires to hold it up, but guy wires are impractical in heavily
farmed areas. 5) Replacing the main bearing for the rotor necessitates
removing the rotor on both a horizontal and a vertical axis machine. In
the case of the latter, it means tearing the whole machine down. (That is
why EOLE 4 in the picture is standing idle). |