Small Wind Turbines provides a thorough grounding in analysing, designing, building, and installing a small wind turbine. Small turbines are introduced by emphasising their differences from large ones and nearly all the analysis and design examples refer to small turbines.
The accompanying software includes MATLAB® programs for power production and starting performance, as well as programs for detailed multi-objective optimisation of blade design. A spreadsheet is also given to help readers apply the simple load model of the IEC standard for small wind turbine safety. Small Wind Turbines represents the distilled outcome of over twenty years experience in fundamental research, design and installation, and field testing of small wind turbines.
Small Wind Turbines is a suitable reference for student projects and detailed design studies, and also provides important background material for engineers and others using small wind turbines for remote power and distributed generation applications.
Table des matières
1. Introduction to Wind Turbine Technology.- 2. Control Volume Analysis for Wind Turbines.- 3. Blade Element Theory for Wind Turbines.- 4. Aerofoils: Lift, Drag, and Circulation.- 5. Blade Element Calculations.- 6. Starting and Low Wind Speed Performance.- 7. Blade Design, Manufacture, and Testing.- 8. The Unsteady Aerodynamics of Turbine Yaw and Over-speed Protection.- 9. Using the IEC Simple Load Model for Small Wind Turbines.- 10. Tower Design and Manufacture.- 11. Generator and Electrical System.- 12. Site Assessment and Installation.
A propos de l’auteur
David Wood has Bachelors’ and Masters’ degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Sydney University and a Ph D in Aeronautics from Imperial College, London, UK. He has been Senior Research Associate at NASA Ames Research Centre in California and has spent many years in the Faculty of Engineering at Newcastle University, where he was instrumental in developing a research group in small wind turbine technology. Dr Wood was the Australian representative on the international committee that recently revised the International Electrotechnical Commission safety standard for small wind turbines. In 2006 he left the University of Newcastle to start Aerogenesis Australia, a small company building small wind turbines. In February 2010 he was appointed to the Enmax/Schulich Chair of Renewable Energy at the University of Calgary. He is the editor for small turbines and aerodynamics for the journal
Wind Engineering and has authored and co-authored over 120 refereed journal and conferencepapers in these areas. He holds patents on blade and controller design.