1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a marine current power plant which is especially used as a tidal power plant, and a method for its operation.
2. Description of the Related Art
Marine current power plants are known which comprise propeller-shaped water turbines arranged as buoyancy rotors combined with an electric generator, which are driven as freestanding units by the flow of a water body. An axial turbine design with a horizontal rotational axis is preferred in the present case. The use of such marine current power plants for power generation from a water course or a marine current can be considered at locations where no extensive barrages can be erected. A water turbine with a profile that can use bidirectional inflows can be used for power generation from tides, or the marine current power plant can be adjusted automatically in its entirety during the change in the direction of a current.
Without the locking mechanisms that are typically provided in dam structures in the flow channels leading to the water turbine there is no possibility for decoupling from the ambient flow for generic marine current power plants in the case of an overload. Accordingly, measures must be taken for the protection of the installations in the event of strong inflow.
One possibility for the down-regulation of the power and load is to provide the water turbine with rotor blades that are rotatably fixed to a hub part. The rotor blades are guided to the feathering pitch for down-regulation. The rotatable rotor blade holder required for this purpose is complex from a constructional standpoint, especially for the large-size installations that are necessary for efficient power generation from currents that flow slowly. Furthermore, the bearing components and actuators required for setting the blade angle as well as the relevant control unit represent a source of increased failure risk. Since generic installations will typically be immersed completely, maintenance of the installation is difficult so that a simplified installation concept with rotor blades linked in a torsionally rigid manner will lead to an installation with a longer operational lifespan.
An alternative measure for down-regulation, which is especially used for water turbines with rotor blades fixed in a torsionally rigid manner, is operating the marine current power plant with a tip speed ratio above the power-optimal tip speed ratio. Reference is hereby made by way of example to DE 10 2008 053 732 B3. The tip speed ratio represents the ratio between the blade tip speed and the inflow velocity averaged over the rotor circle.
The overspeed range used for down-regulation reaches from the power-optimal tip speed ratio up to a tip speed ratio associated with the runaway speed, for which the braking generator torque will be cancelled. In this respect, the tip speed ratios used for down-regulation in strong inflow can lead to centrifugal forces which exert a strong load on the installation. The power absorbed by the water turbine for high tip speed ratios will be reduced effectively. However, the thrust forces absorbed by the water turbine will not decrease to the same extent. Consequently, there is a thrust coefficient in the runaway speed for which critical thrust loads can act on the installation in the case of a further increase in the average inflow speed.
What is needed in the art is a marine current power plant and a method for the operation of a water turbine in the overspeed range which can produce effective down-regulation concerning the power and the loads, especially the axial thrust load, already at low tip speed ratios. In particular, there is a need for down-regulation that occurs for a tip speed ratio which lies sufficiently beneath the tip speed ratio associated with the runaway speed.
The invention is based on a generic marine current power plant, especially a tidal power plant. This relates to a marine current power plant which comprises a water turbine with several rotor blades which are arranged as a buoyancy rotor, e.g. a horizontal rotor turbine. The water turbine drives an electric generator at least indirectly, but a direct drive is more common, i.e. a torsionally rigid coupling of the electric generator with the water turbine via a drive shaft. Alternatively, the coupling between the electric generator and the water turbine can occur indirectly, e.g. via an interposed hydrodynamic coupling.
Accordingly, an embodiment is provided for which the generator torque generated by the electric generator acts in a braking manner on the water turbine, wherein the load current for adjusting the stator voltage components (d, q) of the electric generator can be set by an open-loop or closed-loop control unit and therefore for predetermining a specific generator torque. This control apparatus for the electric generator is realized, for example, by means of a frequency converter, which comprises an intermediate DC circuit, a rectifier on the generator side and an inverter on the mains side for mains connection of the electric generator. The rectifier on the generator side predetermines the load current on the generator stator.
For the purpose of limiting the power taken from the flow, the water turbine is down-regulated from a predetermined nominal power by guidance into the overspeed range. For this purpose, the tip speed ratio λ of the water turbine is shifted towards higher values in relation to the power-optimal tip speed ratio λopt. The tip speed of the water turbine can be performed in this process up to the runaway speed, for which only the frictional losses will act as braking torques on the water turbine, which means the generator torque will be cancelled completely. The runaway speed depends on the mean inflow speed, wherein a tip speed ratio λd remains substantially constant.
In accordance with the invention, the down-regulation of a generic marine current power plant is carried out in a range which is sufficiently distanced from the tip speed ratio λd associated with the runaway speed in the direction towards lower tip speed ratios λ. This leads to a safety reserve until the water turbine is released by complete removal of the generator torque. For this purpose, the characteristics of the water turbine are adjusted in accordance with the invention to the operation under cavitation, since the power coefficient and thrust coefficient curves will decrease steeply upon occurrence of cavitation with rising tip speed ratio λ.
The water turbine will be adjusted to the immersion depth of the marine current power plant in such a way that in the overspeed range, i.e. above a power-optimal tip speed ratio λopt, a cavitation tip speed ratio threshold λk is determined, which is sufficiently beneath the tip speed ratio λd which is associated with the runaway speed. Load limiting means are thus provided in a control apparatus which set the tip speed ratio λ for the water turbine in such a way that, in the case of a strong inflow, a value for λ above the cavitation tip speed ratio threshold λk will follow. This leads to the following:
As a result of the abrupt drop in the power coefficient of the water turbine upon occurrence of cavitation, down-regulation will already occur at relatively low tip speed ratios λ, so that lower centrifugal forces need to be caught in the revolving unit of the marine current power plant. As a result, relatively high tip speed ratios λ can be used, i.e. in the power-optimal operation with the power-optimal tip speed ratio λopt, thus leading to simplified bearing. Slide bearings can be used in particular. Furthermore, sufficiently high rotational speeds in power-optimal operation allow a compact electric generator.
Heavy inflow conditions, in which the water turbine revolves in the cavitation range, lead to high blade tip speeds. Sound is produced during the explosion of the cavitation bubbles which keeps marine life away from the rotor blades which revolve rapidly in this case. Furthermore, cavitation removes maritime growth on the rotor blades.
Down-regulation of the marine current power plant preferably relates to a limitation in the thrust force of the water turbine in the direction of rotation in addition to the limitation of the power taken up by the water turbine. The thrust force on the rotor can be reduced above a predetermined low threshold by shifting towards higher tip speed ratios λ. The strong drop in the thrust coefficient CF on occurrence of the cavitation which is the result of the rotor characteristics in accordance with the invention will be utilized in accordance with the invention. Otherwise, substantially higher rotational speeds are required for the down-regulation, so that there is a likelihood that the runaway speed is reached, wherein in this case a further increase in the mean inflow speed will successively increase the thrust load entered by the water turbine.
For the purpose of cavitation-proof configuration of the rotor, the parts of the rotor blade which are affected by cavitation will be provided with a protective coating. An elastomeric material can be applied for this purpose. Cavitation-proof covers such as plastic elements can be anchored as an alternative on the load-bearing structures at locations on the rotor blade surface on which cavitation is expected. The rotor characteristics are adjusted to the immersion depth in such a way that the cavitation is locally limited to the blade tip region. The region of the rotor blade is preferred on which cavitation can occur at a position at the apex of the rotor circle, limited to the radially outer third of the longitudinal extension of the blade.
The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description of (an) embodiment(s) of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing(s), wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate embodiments of the invention and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
The revolving unit 2 of the marine current power plant 1 includes a propeller-shaped water turbine 3 with three rotor blades 4.1, 4.2, 4.3. Each rotor blade 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 includes on the radially outer half a cavitation-proof coating 6.1, 6.2, 6.3, which is arranged as an elastomeric coating. Furthermore, an electric generator 11 can be connected in a torsion-proof way to the water turbine 3. The electric generator 11 is associated with a control device 12 which is used for setting the generator torque. The speed guidance of the water turbine 3 occurs on the basis of a predetermined tip speed ratio λ. The control apparatus 12 includes load limiting means 13 for setting tip speed ratios λ up to and above a cavitation tip speed ratio threshold λk.
The power coefficient cp has a maximum for a power-optimal speed ratio λopt.
Furthermore, the thrust coefficient cF is determined from the thrust force F in the direction of the rotational axis of the water turbine 3, the density p of the flow medium, the averaged inflow speed v and the rotor radius r as follows:
The continuous curves in
As a result of the cavitation effects utilized in accordance with the invention, down-regulation already occurs at relatively low tip speed ratios λ, so that the system can operate at a sufficiently high power-optimal speed ratio λopt. This allows normal operation of the installation with a rapidly running water turbine 3, thus simplifying the configuration of the bearing and allowing for a compact size of the electric generator.
An averaged inflow velocity v above v2 represents a range for which the runaway speed Nd has been reached. Accordingly, the tip speed ratio λ remains on a constant tip speed ratio λd which is associated with the runaway speed nd. Accordingly, an increase in the averaged inflow velocity v in the overload range B4 leads to a renewed increase in the thrust load F which can exceed the configuration of the installation. That is why effective down-regulation should be achieved already for sufficiently low tip speed ratios λ in the preceding load-limited operating range B3. Such down-regulation follows from the cavitation operation in accordance with the invention along the continuous curve in the load-limited operating range B3 for the set load-limited tip speed ratio λF. In contrast, the dot-dash curve III indicates the progression without the occurrence of cavitation.
Further embodiments of the invention can be considered within the scope of the following claims, wherein the invention can also be applied to vertical axial rotors in addition to the horizontal rotors as illustrated above. Furthermore, embodiments with a jacket turbine can also be considered.
While this invention has been described with respect to at least one embodiment, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 107 286.5 | Jul 2011 | DE | national |
This is a continuation of PCT application No. PCT/EP2012/002764, entitled “A MARINE CURRENT POWER PLANT AND A METHOD FOR ITS OPERATION”, filed Jul. 2, 2012, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2012/002764 | Jul 2012 | US |
Child | 14147949 | US |