The ratio between the speed of the blade tips and the speed
of the wind is called tip speed ratio. High efficiency 3-blade-turbines have
tip speed/wind speed ratios of 6 to 7.
Modern wind turbines are designed to spin at varying speeds
(a consequence of their generator design, see above). Use of aluminum and
composite materials in their blades has contributed to low rotational inertia,
which means that newer wind turbines can accelerate quickly if the winds pick
up, keeping the tip speed ratio more nearly constant. Operating closer to their
optimal tip speed ratio during energetic gusts of wind allows wind turbines to
improve energy capture from sudden gusts that are typical in urban settings.
In contrast, older style wind turbines were designed with
heavier steel blades, which have higher inertia, and rotated at speeds governed
by the AC frequency of the power lines. The high inertia buffered the changes
in rotation speed and thus made power output more stable.
The speed and torque at which a wind turbine rotates must be
controlled for several reasons:
● To optimize the aerodynamic efficiency
of the rotor in light winds.
● To keep the generator within its speed
and torque limits.
● To keep the rotor and hub within their
centripetal force limits. The centripetal force from the spinning rotors
increases as the square of the rotation speed, which makes this structure
sensitive to overspeed.
● To keep the rotor and tower within their
strength limits. Because the power of the wind increases as the cube of the
wind speed, turbines have to be built to survive much higher wind loads (such
as gusts of wind) than those from which they can practically generate power.
Since the blades generate more downwind force (and thus put far greater stress
on the tower) when they are producing torque, most wind turbines have ways of
reducing torque in high winds.
● To enable maintenance; because it is
dangerous to have people working on a wind turbine while it is active, it is
sometimes necessary to bring a turbine to a full stop.
● To reduce noise; As a rule of thumb, the
noise from a wind turbine increases with the fifth power of the relative wind
speed (as seen from the moving tip of the blades). In noise-sensitive
environments, the tip speed can be limited to approximately 60 m/s (200 ft/s).
More and more engineers realized that the scale of the
today's wind turbine blades is now rendering the early trial-and-error
intuition-based approaches outdated. Predictive computer tools which are
fundamentally founded on mechanics principles are needed to analyze the blade
structure in the early design process. Recently, VABS originally developed in
helicopter industry, is introduced as a rigorous, engineering-friendly approach
for modeling realistic, composite rotor blades. VABS can easily save orders of
magnitude computational cost without sacrificing the accuracy. An critical
assessment of computer tools for calculating composite wind turbine blade
properties has shown that VABS is the best tool available for modeling
composite wind turbine blades among all the other tools available in the wind
industry.
Using composites adds a significant level of complexity into
the engineering of modern wind turbines. One has to simultaneously consider the
heterogeneity and anisotropy of the material in the design and analysis. Such
characteristics of composites will introduce new deformation modes such as
extension-twist or twist-bending couplings defying the conventional blade
analysis. VABS is the only computational tool which can rigorously capture all
the deformation modes including elastic couplings due to use of composites.
The determination of the number of blades involves design
considerations of aerodynamic efficiency, component costs, system reliability,
and aesthetics. Noise emissions are affected by the location of the blades
upwind or downwind of the tower and the speed of the rotor. Given that the
noise emissions from the blades' trailing edges and tips vary by the 5th power
of blade speed, a small increase in tip speed can make a large difference.
Wind turbines developed over the last 50 years have almost
universally used either two or three blades. Aerodynamic efficiency increases
with number of blades but with diminishing return. Increasing the number of
blades from one to two yields a six percent increase in aerodynamic efficiency,
whereas increasing the blade count from two to three yields only an additional
three percent in efficiency. Further increasing the blade count yields minimal
improvements in aerodynamic efficiency and sacrifices too much in blade
stiffness as the blades become thinner.
Component costs that are affected by blade count are
primarily for materials and manufacturing of the turbine rotor and drive train.
Generally, the fewer the number of blades, the lower the material and
manufacturing costs will be. In addition, the fewer the number of blades, the
higher the rotational speed can be. This is because blade stiffness
requirements to avoid interference with the tower limit how thin the blades can
be manufactured, but only for upwind machines; deflection of blades in a
downwind machine results in increased tower clearance. Fewer blades with higher
rotational speeds reduce peak torques in the drive train, resulting in lower
gearbox and generator costs.
System reliability is affected by blade count primarily
through the dynamic loading of the rotor into the drive train and tower
systems. While aligning the wind turbine to changes in wind direction (yawing),
each blade experiences a cyclic load at its root end depending on blade
position. This is true of one, two, three blades or more. However, these cyclic
loads when combined together at the drive train shaft are symmetrically
balanced for three blades, yielding smoother operation during turbine yaw.
Turbines with one or two blades can use a pivoting teetered hub to also nearly
eliminate the cyclic loads into the drive shaft and system during yawing.
Finally, aesthetics can be considered a factor in that some
people find that the three-bladed rotor is more pleasing to look at than a one-
or two-bladed rotor.
New generation wind turbine designs are pushing power
generation from the single megawatt range to upwards of 10 megawatts. The
common trend of these larger capacity designs are larger and larger wind
turbine blades. Covering a larger area effectively increases the tip-speed
ratio of a turbine at a given wind speed, thus increasing the energy extraction
capability of a turbine system.
Current production wind turbine blades are manufactured as
large as 100 meters in diameter with prototypes in the range of 110 to 120
meters. In 2001, an estimated 50 million kilograms of fiberglass laminate were
used in wind turbine blades. New materials and manufacturing methods provide
the opportunity to improve wind turbine efficiency by allowing for larger,
stronger blades.
One of the most important goals when designing larger blade
systems is to keep blade weight under control. Since blade mass scales as the
cube of the turbine radius, loading due to gravity becomes a constraining
design factor for systems with larger blades.
Current manufacturing methods for blades in the 40 to 50
meter range involve various proven fiberglass composite fabrication techniques.
Manufactures such as Nordex and GE Wind use an infusion process for blade manufacture.
Other manufacturers use variations on this technique, some including carbon and
wood with fiberglass in an epoxy matrix. Options also include prepreg
fiberglass and vacuum-assisted resin transfer molding. Essentially each of
these options are variations on the same theme: a glass-fiber reinforced
polymer composite constructed through various means with differing complexity.
Perhaps the largest issue with more simplistic, open-mold, wet systems are the
emissions associated with the volatile organics released into the atmosphere.
Preimpregnated materials and resin infusion techniques avoid the release of
volatiles by containing all reaction gases. However, these contained processes
have their own challenges, namely the production of thick laminates necessary
for structural components becomes more difficult. As the preform resin
permeability dictates the maximum laminate thickness, bleeding is required to
eliminate voids and insure proper resin distribution. A unique solution to
resin distribution is the use of a partially pre impregnated fiberglass. During
evacuation, the dry fabric provides a path for airflow and, once heat and
pressure are applied, resin may flow into the dry region resulting in a
thoroughly impregnated laminate structure.
Epoxy-based composites are of greatest interest to wind
turbine manufacturers because they deliver a key combination of environmental,
production, and cost advantages over other resin systems. Epoxies also improve
wind turbine blade composite manufacture by allowing for shorter cure cycles,
increased durability, and improved surface finish. Prepreg operations further
improve cost-effective operations by reducing processing cycles, and therefore
manufacturing time, over wet lay-up systems. As turbine blades are approaching
60 meters and greater, infusion techniques are becoming more prevalent as the
traditional resin transfer moulding injection time is too long as compared to
the resin set-up time, thus limiting laminate thickness. Injection forces resin
through a thicker ply stack, thus depositing the resin where in the laminate
structure before gelation occurs. Specialized epoxy resins have been developed
to customize lifetimes and viscosity to tune resin performance in injection
applications.
Carbon fiber-reinforced load-bearing spars have recently been
identified as a cost-effective means for reducing weight and increasing
stiffness. The use of carbon fibers in 60 meter turbine blades is estimated to
result in a 38% reduction in total blade mass and a 14% decrease in cost as
compared to a 100% fiberglass design. The use of carbon fibers has the added
benefit of reducing the thickness of fiberglass laminate sections, further
addressing the problems associated with resin wetting of thick lay-up sections.
Wind turbine applications of carbon fiber may also benefit from the general
trend of increasing use and decreasing cost of carbon fiber materials.
Smaller blades can be made from light metals such as
aluminum. Wood and canvas sails were originally used on early windmills due to
their low price, availability, and ease of manufacture. These materials,
however, require frequent maintenance during their lifetime. Also, wood and
canvas have a relatively high drag (low aerodynamic efficiency) as compared to
the force they capture. For these reasons they have been mostly replaced by
solid airfoils.