Wind Turbine Aerodynamics and Vorticity-Based Methods

£219.50

Wind Turbine Aerodynamics and Vorticity-Based Methods

Fundamentals and Recent Applications

Classical mechanics Engineering: Mechanics of fluids Electrical engineering Alternative and renewable energy sources and technology

Author: Emmanuel Branlard

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Collection: Research Topics in Wind Energy

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 5th April 2017

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 9 Mb

ISBN: 9783319551647


Introduction to Fluid Mechanics and Vortex Theories

The book introduces the fundamentals of fluid-mechanics, momentum theories, vortex theories and vortex methods necessary for the study of rotors aerodynamics and wind-turbines aerodynamics in particular. Rotor theories are presented in a great level of details at the beginning of the book. These theories include: the blade element theory, the Kutta-Joukowski theory, the momentum theory and the blade element momentum method.

Vortex Methods and Wind Turbine Aerodynamics

A part of the book is dedicated to the description and implementation of vortex methods. The remaining of the book focuses on the study of wind turbine aerodynamics using vortex-theory analyses or vortex-methods. Examples of vortex-theory applications are: optimal rotor design, tip-loss corrections, yaw-models and dynamic inflow models. Historical derivations and recent extensions of the models are presented.

Analytical Vortex Models

The cylindrical vortex model is another example of a simple analytical vortex model presented in this book. This model leads to the development of different BEM models and it is also used to provide the analytical velocity field upstream of a turbine or a wind farm under aligned or yawed conditions. Different applications of numerical vortex methods are presented. Numerical methods are used for instance to investigate the influence of a wind turbine on the incoming turbulence.

Numerical and Analytical Flow Studies

Sheared inflows and aero-elastic simulations are investigated using vortex methods for the first time. Many analytical flows are derived in details: vortex rings, vortex cylinders, Hill's vortex, vortex blobs etc. They are used throughout the book to devise simple rotor models or to validate the implementation of numerical methods. Several Matlab programs are provided to ease some of the most complex implementations.

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