TY - JOUR
T1 - Lessons learned from 10 years of wind tunnel tests on small wind turbines designed by students
AU - Schepers, J. G.
AU - Adema, N. C.
AU - Lipian, M.
AU - Kulak, M.
AU - Shahid, A.
AU - Kim, T.
AU - Gaunaa, M.
AU - Teuwen, J. J.E.
AU - Holierhoek, J. G.
AU - More Authors, null
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This article discusses results from an international contest, open for university student teams (bachelor and master), involving the design, construction, and testing of small wind turbines in a large wind tunnel. The wind tunnel has an outlet of 2.85 x 2.85 m allowing a maximum rotor swept area of 2 m2 without significant tunnel effects. Both horizontal and vertical axis wind turbines are part of the competition. The turbines are evaluated by an external jury of industry experts based on criteria such as Annual Energy Production, cut-in wind speed, innovations, design, and sustainability. Although the contest has been initiated in 2013 with an educational focus, it has also evolved into a valuable database for scientific purposes by providing a decade worth of performance measurements for roughly 9-10 various turbine concepts each year. The collected data may serve as a unique validation resource for assessing the accuracy of design codes in modelling diverse turbine concepts thanks to detailed design reports with model descriptions accompanying each turbine (such turbine descriptions are often considered confidential for field measurements). The paper aims to explore the scientific value of this database by comparing calculations with measurements, offering explanations where possible, and reporting intriguing findings on unconventional concepts' performance. Even though not all observations could be explained fully they provide food for thought. Recommendations are provided for both students to enhance their designs and for contest organizers to elevate the scientific value of the measurements in future contests.
AB - This article discusses results from an international contest, open for university student teams (bachelor and master), involving the design, construction, and testing of small wind turbines in a large wind tunnel. The wind tunnel has an outlet of 2.85 x 2.85 m allowing a maximum rotor swept area of 2 m2 without significant tunnel effects. Both horizontal and vertical axis wind turbines are part of the competition. The turbines are evaluated by an external jury of industry experts based on criteria such as Annual Energy Production, cut-in wind speed, innovations, design, and sustainability. Although the contest has been initiated in 2013 with an educational focus, it has also evolved into a valuable database for scientific purposes by providing a decade worth of performance measurements for roughly 9-10 various turbine concepts each year. The collected data may serve as a unique validation resource for assessing the accuracy of design codes in modelling diverse turbine concepts thanks to detailed design reports with model descriptions accompanying each turbine (such turbine descriptions are often considered confidential for field measurements). The paper aims to explore the scientific value of this database by comparing calculations with measurements, offering explanations where possible, and reporting intriguing findings on unconventional concepts' performance. Even though not all observations could be explained fully they provide food for thought. Recommendations are provided for both students to enhance their designs and for contest organizers to elevate the scientific value of the measurements in future contests.
KW - Human Capital Agenda
KW - Small wind turbines
KW - Wind Tunnel testing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85196422751&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/2767/7/072009
DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/2767/7/072009
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85196422751
SN - 1742-6588
VL - 2767
JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
IS - 7
M1 - 072009
T2 - 2024 Science of Making Torque from Wind, TORQUE 2024
Y2 - 29 May 2024 through 31 May 2024
ER -