The subject matter disclosed herein relates generally to wind turbines. More particularly, the subject matter relates to a crossflow wind turbine for installation on a roof or other structure.
Small wind generation for both rural and suburban applications is dominated by small Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines (HAWT's) in the 1 to 20 kilowatt hour size range, usually mounted on towers of 10 to 20 meters in height. Vertical axis wind turbines may also be used, having a 360 degree yaw angle of acceptance. Vertical axis wind turbines may be particularly advantageous in urban settings having highly turbulent wind. Furthermore, tower mounting of these small wind generators is most common because it allows for operation higher in the atmospheric boundary layer. Tower mounting is also common because many typical residential and agricultural structures cannot directly accommodate the concentrated loads from direct mounting. Due to their designs, these existing small wind technologies generally have high capital costs compared to utility scale wind generation and conventional thermal resources. This is also in part because most wind technologies strive for cost effectiveness through efficiency increases with highly engineered aerodynamic designs and control systems, thereby increasing kilowatt hour per installed unit. Thus, the economic viability for small wind technologies, aside from niche applications, is largely dependent on subsidies. A substantial reduction in the installed cost of small wind devices is necessary before large scale utilization of this technology can be realized.
Thus, a relatively low cost crossflow wind turbine for installation on a roof or other structure would be well received in the art.
According to one aspect of the invention, a wind turbine comprises: a cylindrical impeller having a plurality of blades located about a radius of the cylindrical impeller, the blades having a span that is less than or equal to 20 percent of the radius; an inlet duct that channels an airflow to the impeller; and an outlet duct that channels the airflow away from the impeller substantially perpendicular to the inlet airflow in a plane that is perpendicular to a central axis of the impeller; and wherein the inlet duct, the outlet duct and the impeller induce a recirculation zone in a center portion of the impeller that is located within the blades of the impeller.
According to another aspect of the invention, a wind turbine comprises: an impeller having a plurality of blades located about a radius, wherein the blades are thin, curved and narrowly spaced such that turbulent flow is reduced across the blades, wherein the blades have a thin span such that they do not approach a central axis of the impeller; an outer housing configured to be integrated on an edge of a building or structure such that a central axis of the impeller is parallel with the edge of the building or structure; an inlet duct that channels an inlet airflow to the impeller; an outlet duct that channels an outlet airflow away from the impeller an angle between 45 degrees and 135 degrees to the inlet airflow in a plane that is perpendicular to the central axis of the impeller; and a generator in operable communication with the impeller configured to convert the mechanical rotational energy of the impeller to electrical energy.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, a crossflow wind turbine comprises: a cylindrical impeller having a plurality of blades located about a radius of the impeller, the blades having a span that is less than or equal to 20 percent of the radius, wherein the blades are spaced at a distance that is less than 1.5 times the span of the blades; an inlet duct that channels an inlet airflow in a first direction to the impeller; an outlet duct that channels an outlet airflow in a second direction away from the impeller, wherein the second direction is substantially perpendicular to the inlet airflow in a plane that is perpendicular to a central axis of the impeller; and a foul prevention means configured to prevent fouling of the impeller.
The subject matter which is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
A detailed description of the hereinafter described embodiments of the disclosed apparatus and method are presented herein by way of exemplification and not limitation with reference to the Figures.
Referring firstly to
The crossflow wind turbine 10 is configured for building integration. For example, the crossflow wind turbine 10 may be installed at an apex of a roof (shown in
Referring now to
The inlet ducting 30, 32 and the outlet ducting 34, 36 of the crossflow wind turbine 10 may be asymmetrical in order to optimize output of the impeller 18 when wind is coming from the inlet 14 rather than the outlet 16. This approach may optimize power output of the crossflow wind turbine 10 in an environment with wind that more often flows from one direction than another. For example, a wind rose for Syracuse, NY is shown in
The crossflow wind turbine 10 may include one or more foul prevention means. For example, the crossflow wind turbine 10 is shown with a plurality of inlet and outlet louvers 38. The inlet and outlet louvers 38 may be configured to keep out unwanted debris from the crossflow wind turbine 10, and particularly from the impeller 18. The inlet and outlet louvers 38 may be spaced apart such that unwanted debris is prevented from entering the ducting 30, 32, 34, 36, while not substantially reducing the velocity of the inlet airflow 26. The inlet and outlet louvers 38 may prevent birds, bats, squirrels, or the like from entering the ducting 30, 32, 34, 36 of the cross flow wind turbine 10. The louvers 38 may run the entire length 13 of the crossflow wind turbine 10 and may have a width 40. The width 40 may be any distance that is desirable to perform their function of preventing foul from entering the impeller 18. For example, the louvers 38 may have a width between 1 inches and 5 inches. In other embodiments, the crossflow wind turbine 10 may not include the inlet and outlet louvers 38, but instead may include other foul prevention means such as a mesh screen (not shown). Still further, the foul prevention means may be that the crossflow wind turbine 10 may be configured to periodically rotate the impeller 18 in zero wind conditions to prevent animals from making nests or the like to block the impeller 18 once windy conditions resume. Moreover, the foul prevention means may simply be that the crossflow wind turbine 10 is configured to constantly rotate at a minimum rotational speed in calm conditions. A final foul prevention means may comprise temporarily operating the impeller 18 at a high tip speed in the reverse direction to blow out debris. For example, if the typical rotation direction is clockwise (as shown in the Figures), the final foul prevention means may rotate the impeller 18 in a counterclockwise fashion.
Hereinafter, it should be understood that the “cross sectional height of the ducting” refers to the distance between the upper ducting 30, 34 and the respective lower ducting 32, 36 along an axis that is perpendicular from the upper ducting 30, 34. For example, an axis 41 indicates the cross sectional height of the ducting at a point that is proximate the impeller 18. Furthermore, hereinafter the cross sectional position about the impeller 18 will be defined by the angular degree from the top most point of the impeller 18. Thus, the right-most point of the impeller 18 will be herein referred to as being located at the 90° cross sectional position of the impeller 18, while the left-most point of the impeller 18 will be referred to as being located at the 270° position. Furthermore, the cross section of the impeller 18 may be broken up into four quadrants 42, 44, 46, 48 (shown in
The cross sectional height of the upper and lower inlet ducting 26, 28 may narrow as the airflow 30 approaches the impeller 18. The narrowing of this cross sectional height may be desirable to accelerate the airflow 30 approaching the impeller 18, and also direct the airflow 30 to a more desirable location of the impeller 18. For example, the lower inlet ducting 30 may approach the upper inlet ducting 32 while the upper inlet ducting remains substantially parallel with the original inlet airflow 26, as shown in
The lower inlet ducting 28 may approach the impeller 18 and end at a first cross sectional position 50 that is proximate the impeller 18. The first cross sectional position 50 may be located extremely close to the impeller 18, as shown in
The upper inlet ducting 30 may approach the impeller 18 and end at a second cross sectional position 54 that is proximate the impeller 18. Although the second cross sectional position 54 is shown at a particular location relative to the impeller in
While
The lower outlet ducting 36 may approach the impeller 18 and end at a third cross sectional position 62 that is proximate the impeller 18. The third cross sectional position 62 may be located extremely close to the impeller 18, as shown in
As described hereinabove, the outlet ducting 34, 36 may have a different cross sectional profile than the inlet ducting 30, 32. The outlet ducting 34, 36 may conform to the above described ranges A, B, C. Similar to the inlet ducting 30, 32, the cross sectional height of the outlet ducting 34, 36 may narrow as the ducting approaches the impeller 18. The narrowing of the cross sectional height of the outlet ducting 34, 36 in this manner may accelerate flow entering the outlet 16 when the crossflow wind turbine 10 is operating in reverse due to opposite directional wind patterns. Further, the restriction in the cross sectional height of the outlet ducting 34, 36 at the impeller 18 may increase efficiency of the crossflow wind turbine 10 operating in the typical wind environment with the inlet airflow 26 entering the inlet 14 and the outlet airflow 28 exiting the outlet 16.
Referring still to
The blades 20 of the crossflow wind turbine 10 may span less than 20 percent of the radius of the impeller 18. The blades 20 may be inwardly curved such that the outer most end of the blade 20 extends in a direction that is tangential to the central axis 11 of the impeller 18. As the blade 20 extends along its span 65 to the inner most end, the blade 20 is curved to extend in a direction that intersects (or comes closer to intersecting) the central axis 11 of the impeller 18. In the embodiment depicted in the Figures, the blades 20 are curved so that the outer tips of the blades 20 in the left quadrant 42 are extending from the middle of the impeller 18 in a downward direction. Thus, the blades 20 of the right quadrant 46 are extending from the middle of the impeller 18 in an upward direction. Thus, the inlet airflow 26 that approaches the left and top quadrants 42, 44 causes the impeller to rotate in the clockwise direction.
The structure of the inlet ducting 30, 32, the outlet ducting 34, 36 and the impeller 18 (including the blades 20) may induce a recirculation zone 15 in a center portion of the impeller 18 that is located within the blades 20 of the impeller 18. The recirculation zone 15 is a mini circulation zone within the impeller 18 that rotates in the same direction as the impeller 18. For example, the recirculation zone 15 may be located in the bottom quadrant 46 of the impeller 18 when the airflow is in the typical direction (in the inlet 14 and out the outlet 16). In this case, the bottom of the impeller is moving in a clockwise manner (from right to left), and the top of the recirculation zone is moving from left to right. In essence, the recirculation zone 15 in this example is a mini clockwise rotational zone located in the bottom quadrant within the impeller 18. It should be understood that the recirculation zone 15 may move to the top quadrant 44 within the impeller 18 when the airflow is reversed.
The impeller 18 may be held together with structural disks 64 located at the ends of the impeller 18. Bearings 72 (shown in
The impeller 18 may be operable, for example, between 100 and 4000 rotations per minute. The blades 20 of the impeller 18 may have an operable tip speed or velocity of up to two times the air velocity at the minimum cross sectional height of the inlet, represented at axis 41. The crossflow wind turbine 10 may further include a system for controlling the rotational speed of the impeller 18. This system may be configured to measure the shaft speed and shaft power of the impeller 18. With these measurements, the system may dither the shaft speed of the impeller 18 to obtain maximum power output from the impeller 18. Furthermore, the speed control may be configured to keep the ratio of the tip speed of the blades 20 to the inlet velocity of the airflow constant under normal power generation operation. Moreover the speed control may move at least one of the inlet ducting 30, 32 and the outlet ducting 34, 36 to allow bypass of airflow around the impeller 18 to reduce the aero efficiency of the impeller 18. This may be useful in extremely high wind situations where the blade speed has the potential for exceeding tolerances.
Referring now to
Shown in
Referring now to
More than one of the impellers 18 may be connectable lengthwise in series along the apex of a roof. Furthermore, lengthwise sections of the crossflow wind turbines 10 may be manufactured with only the ducting 30, 32, 34, 36 surrounding the impeller 18 and without the generator 22 and the inverter 24, as only a single generator 22 and inverter 24 are necessary for each combination of series impellers 18. To connect the impellers 18, the bearings 72 may be attachable in a prefabricated manner such that the impellers 18 that are connected rotate together. Thus, if a ridge line is fifty feet long, and each stackable unit has a 10 foot length, five units may be connected in series to accomplish the maximum energy generation from the ridge line.
Elements of the embodiments have been introduced with either the articles “a” or “an.” The articles are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “including” and “having” and their derivatives are intended to be inclusive such that there may be additional elements other than the elements listed. The conjunction “or” when used with a list of at least two terms is intended to mean any term or combination of terms. The terms “first” and “second” are used to distinguish elements and are not used to denote a particular order.
While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.