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  • Efficient Vertical Wind Turbines Developed

    Daily Californian, California
    Nov 17 2004

    Efficient Vertical Wind Turbines Developed

    Wind Turbines Provide More Power, Reduced Maintenance Compared To
    Traditional Models

    By NATALIYA ROVENSKAYA
    Contributing Writer


    Berkeley researchers have helped to fashion a wind turbine that can
    provide power at a more efficient rate, with lower noise and
    maintenance and fewer bird fatalities than traditional windmills.
    This month, the researchers collaborated with engineers in Russia,
    who have been working to establish 1-kilowatt and 3-kilowatt wind
    turbines in barren locations.

    The vertical turbine blades spin at about twice the speed of the
    wind, much lower than the tip speeds of horizontal turbine blades.
    The faster tip speed makes the blade both noisy and dangerous to
    birds - many species of birds are being killed by wind farms, leading
    land stakeholders to find a solution.

    `The blades travel at roughly 40 mph in a 20 mph wind, so if the
    blades are made plainly visible, birds should be able to see and
    avoid the blades most of the time,' said Glen Dahlbacka, researcher
    in the Department of Energy at the Lawrence Berkeley National
    Laboratory.

    Dahlbacka and fellow researcher Joseph Rasson traveled to Russia to
    inspect the 3-kilowatt turbine unit.

    Infrequent high storm winds cause the blades to spin faster than
    researchers intend, so the turbines are shut down on storm days.

    The vertical turbine system has an alternator designed to spin at the
    speed of the turbine and generate about 200 volts of energy. The
    alternator and turbine are a single moving part of the system and
    lead to reduced maintenance requirements.

    A computer controls the speed of the turbine and keeps it operating
    at a maximum efficiency for a given wind speed.

    The researchers are expecting success and they believe the Russian
    market alone will guarantee this. Projects are also being conducted
    in Khazistan, Armenia, Ukraine and Georgia, and all have a U.S.
    industrial partner involved. Empire Magnets will attempt to
    commercialize the wind turbines in the United States and in
    California and New York especially, as these states, according to
    Dahlbacka, have good rebate and tax structures for renewable energy.
    The researchers are expecting the first windmills to arrive in
    February and March.

    `The city of Berkeley has even offered a site for a demonstration
    wind turbine near the Marina. Around the Bay Area the environmental
    conditions are among the most favorable you can imagine.' Dahlbacka
    said.

    The windmills are also convenient because they are suitable for both
    residential and ranch areas. Since Russia has a lot of remote open
    space that can be used for wind power generation, there have been
    many requests from people who live in Russian country houses or
    villas, called dachas.

    `The 1-kilowatt wind turbine is very good for nomadic cultures
    because it is designed to be disassembled and put in the trunk of a
    car or equivalent space and taken from place to place,' Dahlbacka
    said.

    In the next year researchers plan to field 30 of the units in
    environments from Siberia to the Altai Mountains and from British
    Columbia to the Mohave to test the systems in extreme conditions of
    wind, temperature and precipitation.
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