GET THE APP

One and double sided coupling methods for structural analysis of | 53551
Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications

Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications
Open Access

ISSN: 2090-4541

One and double sided coupling methods for structural analysis of wind power blades


World Congress and Exhibition on Wind & Renewable Energy

July 28-30, 2016 Berlin, Germany

Michal Tomaszewski and Jerzy Ma�?�?achowski

Military University of Technology, Poland

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Fundam Renewable Energy Appl

Abstract :

Recent years were marked by increasing interest in harnessing renewable energy sources. Programs are made to popularize natural energy sources such as: Solar energy, ocean waves, river water flow or wind. Great financial investments are made for wind power plants. Wind turbines as energy source were used for centuries, with the difference of converting the wind energy into mechanical energy. With years, their construction and use changed, but the basic principle remained the same. Swift progress of numerical methods allowed constructors to determine how the construction will work even before prototyping. Issues with analyzing wind turbines are far from simple. Wind is a product of pressure differences. The turbineâ�?�?s rotor is subjected to pressure causing strain in the construction. To simulate this, CFD software is required to create wind flow analysis. Such analysis provides us with knowledge about pressure distribution affecting the rotorâ�?�?s blades and visualizes the flow line. To find out how much the blade will bend however, a structural analysis is required. Presented in the paper are analyses made with two different methods of coupling â�?�? one-sided and double-sided. A small wind turbine fitted with diffuser to increase the wind speed in front of the rotor was used in both analyses. A process of building the flow domain to most accurately reproduce the actual flow will be presented. The study was supported by the National Centre for Research and Development within project â�?�?STOWâ�? - Small Wind Turbine Optimized for Wind Low Speed Conditions.

Biography :

Michal Tomaszewski has received the BEng degree in 2013 and the MSc degree in Mechanical Engineering in 2015 from Military University of Technology, Warsaw, Poland. He is currently a PhD candidate in the Department of Mechanics and Applied Computer Science, Military University of Technology, Warsaw, Poland. His areas of interest are renewable energy in terms of computational fluid dynamics, numerical modelling and simulation.

Email: michal.tomaszewski@wat.edu.pl

Top