Vertical wind turbines a better option?
ALBUQUERQUE, Jul 31, 2012 -- UPI
Vertical axis wind turbines have the potential to solve some
of the problems of generating energy from offshore breezes, U.S.
researchers say.
The economics of offshore wind power are different from
land-based turbines due to installation and operational
challenges, and VAWT architecture could transform offshore wind
technology, scientists at the Department of Energy's Sandia
National Laboratory reported.
VAWTs offer three big advantages over horizontal windmill
type turbines that could reduce the cost of wind energy, they
said; a lower turbine center of gravity, reduced machine
complexity and better scalability to very large sizes.
A lower center of gravity means improved stability afloat and
lower fatigue loads, and with the drive train on a VAWT at or
near the surface, maintenance is potentially easier and less
time consuming, researchers said.
"VAWTs are elegant in terms of their mechanical simplicity,"
Josh Paquette, a principal investigator on the Sandia project,
said. "They have fewer parts because they don't need a control
system to point them toward the blowing wind to generate power."
Sandia is conducting the research under a 2011 Department of
Energy program to identify advanced rotor technologies for U.S.
offshore wind power generation.
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