Self-adaptive variable twist morphing blade for wind turbine
11448184 · 2022-09-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05B2260/77
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D1/0675
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/022
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/72
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F05B2240/311
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2240/31
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The twist morphing blade for wind turbine is a blade adapted for attachment to the hub of a wind turbine. The blade has a central shaft extending between the root and tip ends of the blade. A guide track is defined in the central shaft. A sliding mass is slidably disposed in the guide track and bears against a bias spring. A driven shaft is coaxially disposed around the sliding mass and bias spring and rotatably coupled to the sliding mass. Connecting rods extend between the driven shaft and root end of the blade and through active and passive ribs alternately spaced between the driven shaft and the root end of the blade. When incident wind rotates the rotor, centrifugal force linearly slides the mass, which rotates the driven shaft and the connecting rods to deflect the ribs, twist morphing the medial sections of the blade.
Claims
1. A twist morphing blade for wind turbine, comprising: a blade having a root end adapted for attachment to a wind turbine hub and a free tip end opposite the root end; a central shaft disposed within the blade, the central shaft having a linear guide track defined therein extending axially along a portion of the central shaft adjacent the tip end of the blade; a sliding mass disposed on the central shaft, the mass being constrained to linear sliding movement along the guide track; a resilient counterpoise bearing against the sliding mass, the counterpoise resiliently biasing the sliding mass away from the tip end of the blade; a driven shaft coaxially disposed around the central shaft, the driven shaft enclosing the sliding mass and the counterpoise, the driven shaft being coupled to the sliding mass and constrained to rotate when the sliding mass slides along the guide track; a plurality of ribs axially spaced on the central shaft between the driven shaft and the root end of the blade or between the driven shaft and the tip end of the blade, the ribs being dimensioned and configured to impart an airfoil shape to a medial portion of the blade; and a plurality of connecting rods extending between the driven shaft and the ribs, the connecting rods rotating at least some of the ribs to rotate through an arc of rotation independently in order to twist medial sections of the blade to change angle of attack of the blade in response to ambient wind conditions due to centrifugal force acting on the sliding mass.
2. The twist morphing blade according to claim 1, wherein the guide track comprises a slot defined in said central shaft.
3. The twist morphing blade according to claim 2, wherein said sliding mass comprises a ring defining an annular opening closely engaging the central shaft and a plurality of coupling pins extending radially from the ring, the pins being spaced at equal angles.
4. The twist morphing blade according to claim 3, wherein said driven shaft comprises a cylindrical shell having opposing end caps, the cylindrical shell having axially extending variable pitch helical slots defined therein, the sliding mass and the counterpoise being disposed within the cylindrical shell between the end caps, the coupling pins each extending through a corresponding one of the helical slots, whereby linear sliding movement of the sliding mass is converted to variable rotary movement of the driven shaft.
5. The twist morphing blade according to claim 4, wherein one of said coupling pins comprises a stub end extending into the annular opening of the sliding mass and into the slot defining the guide track, thereby constraining the sliding mass to linear sliding on said central shaft.
6. The twist morphing blade according to claim 1, wherein said counterpoise comprises a compression spring.
7. The twist morphing blade according to claim 1, further comprising at least one rotatable disk and at least one rotary disk bearing axially spaced on said central shaft between said driven shaft and the root end of the blade or between the driven shaft and the tip end of the blade, said at least one rotary disk bearing being freely rotatable about said central shaft, said at least one rotatable disk defining an annular opening and having at least one tab extending into the annular opening.
8. The twist morphing blade according to claim 7, wherein said plurality of ribs comprises active ribs and passive ribs alternately disposed on said central shaft, said active ribs being mounted on a corresponding said at least one rotatable disk in which the at least one tab is precalculated to permit the active rib to rotate through an arc of rotation according to prevailing wind speed and said passive ribs being mounted on a corresponding said at least one rotary disk bearing, the active ribs defining twist of the medial sections of the blade and the passive ribs following according to overall global twist of the blade to smooth transitions of a contour of the blade between adjacent pairs of the active ribs.
9. The twist morphing blade according to claim 1, further comprising a deformable, elastomeric skin enveloping the blade, the skin permitting deflection of the ribs to attain a desired morphed shape, while maintaining a wrinkle-free, smooth aerodynamic profile.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(8) Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(9) For wind turbine blades and blades for other propeller driven mechanisms, morphing offers intended aerodynamic performance with reduced mechanical parts, complexity, weight, and comparatively smoother blade profile. The inherent challenge faced by morphing is to achieve blade shape change dynamically using low actuation power, while displaying sufficient load-bearing stiffness and strength. Morphing can be performed by actuating the blade within or out-of-the plane of the blade. In-plane morphing includes spanwise, chordwise, and sweep transformations, whereas out-of-plane morphing comprises of spanwise (bending), chordwise (camber), and twist morphing.
(10) Twist morphing is achieved by varying the incidence angle of an airfoil (blade) by introducing spanwise continuous twist along the blade, called “warping”. The technique is effective in enhancing power generation by wind turbines, particularly in low wind conditions. Further, it has effectively demonstrated load alleviation under wind conditions that would otherwise exceed the rating of the turbine. Adaptive twist morphing has been introduced, which aims at achieving localized twist variations along the span of the blade. The prominent advantage of twist morphing is optimizing the blade geometry along the length of the blade, dictated by the global operating data, including, but not limited to, wind and rotor speed. The variation in wind speed modifies tip speed ratio of the wind turbine. This requires a change in the blade geometry (localized twist morphing) to maintain optimal power generation. Adaptive twist morphing has been observed to be effective in power augmentation and load alleviation.
(11) Twist morphing effects a warp (equivalent to a wing warp) in the aerodynamic shape of the blade. The blade is configured to have an angle of attack that can adaptively vary between the root of the blade (at the part of the blade closest to the hub) and varying toward the outer (tip) edge of the blade. Twist morphing is used to warp the blade to change the angle of attack decreasingly along the blade span, starting from the root of the blade towards the tip.
(12) The actual angle of attack in a static condition with the blade not turning, or at conditions ranging from the static condition to maximum warp, depends on the particular blade design. This is because the blade contour taken at chords along the length of the blade can vary according to the blade design. Twist morphing (or warp) is dynamic, meaning the twist morphing or warp can vary during operation. In the example configuration described below, the dynamic change is effected by centrifugal force acting against a biasing force that counteracts the centrifugal force. In the example described below, the centrifugal force is exerted by a mass (or masses) mounted on a track within the blade, and the biasing force is exerted by a spring (or springs), also located within the blade, with the spring(s) acting on the mass(es) to counteract the centrifugal force.
(13) Twist morphing is performed by active twisting of the entire blade, which results in continuous variation of angle of attack along the span. Twist morphing exhibits noise attenuation, vibration suppression, and superior aerodynamic control. Twist morphing mechanism based on active control of bending-torsion and/or torsion-torsion couplings of composite material requires a distributed network of piezoelectric materials. The drawbacks of such mechanisms include high cost and structural weight. Further, the large inertia of massive turbine blades limits the transient time and demands high actuation power that proves prohibitive in its further applications. Another twist morphing mechanism is based on warping of the airfoil skin. This induces morphing by introducing relative sliding between the upper and lower skin of the airfoil, near the trailing edge. This twist is generated by the rotation of a threaded rod, which enforces relative motion along the span.
(14) In general, the ability of twist morphing to attain large deflections without undermining the aerodynamic profile has exhibited great potential for wind turbine application. It allows a wind turbine to optimally generate power over a wider range of wind speeds, thereby significantly increasing the overall energy production. The limitations of adaptive twist morphing involve mechanical complexity in design and production of blades. Other considerations are the actuation costs and operational frequency of the mechanism for industrial applications.
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(16) As shown in
(17) As shown schematically in
(18) As shown in
(19) The blade 311 shown in
(20) It should be noted that the weight-force of the sliding mass 113 reverses direction during rotation of the turbine blades 311. It aids morphing in the lower half-cycle of rotation of the turbine's rotor, but opposes it in the upper half-cycle. An appropriate harmonic filter (such as a viscous fluid) may be introduced into the driven shaft 125 to dampen or eliminate the influence of cyclic gravitational load during wind turbine operation.
(21) The above-described twist morphing blades were integrated into an NREL Phase II research wind turbine for demonstration. The wind turbine blade is 5.03 m in length and was segmented by seven ribs between 0.55<r/R<0.85. As shown in
(22) It is to be understood that the twist morphing blade for wind turbine is not limited to the specific embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the generic language of the following claims enabled by the embodiments described herein, or otherwise shown in the drawings or described above in terms sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the claimed subject matter.