STABILIZED HORIZONTAL-AXIS WIND TURBINE
20200300224 ยท 2020-09-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
F03D7/0224
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B2035/446
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
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
F03D13/25
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/0216
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2240/912
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D1/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/3201
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/0204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2240/93
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04H12/345
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F03D13/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/321
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/727
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
International classification
F03D13/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The nacelle of a horizontal axis wind turbine is fixedly mounted on a tower, and the tower is mounted off-center with respect to a ring around which it is rotatable. The tower is a tripod. Two legs of the tripod are of fixed length and lie in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the turbine blades. The third leg of the tripod is of adjustable length and is aligned with the axis of rotation of the turbine blades. The third leg thus may be controlled to adjust for pitching of the base and other purposes. Multiple turbines, spaced apart laterally, may be mounted on a platform in a fixed orientation, with the platform rotatably mounted off-center relative to a base.
Claims
1. A wind turbine comprising a set of generally vertical blades which sweep around a horizontal axis of rotation; a nacelle comprising at least a horizontal shaft driven by the blades and a drive train; an upright structure supporting the nacelle and blades, the upright structure extending below the sweep of the blades, and a generally horizontal base supporting the upright structure, wherein, the upright structure maintains the nacelle and blades fixed against yaw with respect to the upright structure, and the upright structure is mounted to a rotatable support carried by the base, so that the upright structure, the nacelle, and the blades rotate together with respect to the base.
2. The wind turbine of claim 1 wherein the center of gravity of the turbine is positioned behind the axis of rotation of the support.
3. The wind turbine of claim 1 comprising an active yaw control at or adjacent the level of the base.
4. The wind turbine of claim 3 wherein the active yaw control comprises an electromagnetic force applied to the rotatable support.
5. The wind turbine of claim 1 wherein the upright structure comprises two generally vertical legs spaced behind the blades and a third leg, the third leg being generally coplanar with the horizontal shaft.
6. The wind turbine of claim 1 wherein the rotatable support is mounted for rotation within a ring structure.
7. The wind turbine of claim 6 wherein the rotatable structure comprises an inner ring rotating inside the ring structure.
8. The wind turbine of claim 7 wherein ring structure comprises discrete spaced-apart supports supporting the inner ring vertically and horizontally.
9. The wind turbine of claim 2 further comprising a brake deployable to hold the upright structure relative to the ring when the ring pitches or rolls.
10. The wind turbine of claim 5 wherein the pitch of the axis of rotation of the blades relative to the upright structure is controlled by changing the length of the third leg.
11. A wind turbine comprising a set of generally vertical blades which sweep around a horizontal axis of rotation; a nacelle comprising at least a horizontal shaft driven by the blades and a drive train; an upright structure supporting the nacelle and blades, the upright structure extending below the sweep of the blades, and a generally horizontal floating base supporting the upright structure, wherein, the pitch of the axis of rotation of the blades relative to the upright structure is adjustable and is controlled by a pitch control mechanism.
12. The wind turbine of claim 11 wherein the pitch mechanism comprises an adjustable-length strut having a load path to a support.
13. The wind turbine of claim 12 wherein the adjustable strut causes part or all of two generally vertical legs of a tripod tower to pivot with respect to the base.
14. The wind turbine of claim 12 wherein the nacelle is pivotable about a generally horizontal axis with respect to the support structure to control pitch, the pitch of the rotor axis being controlled by an actuator.
15. The wind turbine of claim 11 wherein the pitch control mechanism includes a control programmed to orient the axis of rotation of the blades away from horizontal to slow rotation of the blades.
16. A wind turbine comprising a set of generally vertical blades which sweep around a horizontal axis of rotation; a nacelle comprising at least a horizontal shaft driven by the blades and a drive train; an upright structure supporting the nacelle and blades, the upright structure extending below the sweep of the blades, and a generally horizontal base supporting the upright structure, wherein, multiple turbines are mounted to the upright structure on a single mounting platform, the mounting platform being rotatable with respect to the base and the turbines being fixed against yaw with respect to the upright structure.
17. The wind turbine of claim 16 wherein the support is mounted with the combined center of gravity of the support and the turbines mounted to it behind the center of rotation of the mounting platform.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
[0042] The following detailed description illustrates the invention by way of example and not by way of limitation. This description will clearly enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives and uses of the invention, including what I presently believe is the best mode of carrying out the invention. As various changes could be made in the above constructions without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense. Features from each embodiment may be combined with other embodiments.
[0043] Referring now to the drawings, and in particular
[0044] The generally horizontal support structure HS includes a stationary ring 3 mounted on a floating platform shown schematically at 5. The stationary ring 3 forms a race having an upper arm 3a and a lower arm 3b for supporting a rotatable inner ring 7. The rotatable inner ring 7 has lower wheels 9 riding on the lower arm 3b of the stationary ring 3 and supporting the rotating inner ring. The rotatable inner ring 7 also has upper wheels 11 which can engage the upper arm 3a of the stationary ring 3 should the structure mounted to the inner ring start to tip. The stationary ring 3 is shown partially broken away for clarity.
[0045] The inner ring 7 includes two bosses 13 which are journaled to receive stub shafts 15 carried by support blocks 17. The support blocks 17 are connected to each other by structural tubes 19 which act as tension elements and also cause the blocks 17 to rotate together. The bosses 13 are positioned well behind a diameter of the inner ring 7, so that the support blocks 17 and tubes 19 lie on a chord having a length smaller than the diameter of the inner ring 7. A support bracket 21 is mounted to the rotatable inner ring 7 halfway between the bosses 13 on the smaller arc of the inner ring 7.
[0046] The generally upright support structure VS is mounted to the rotating inner ring through the support blocks 17 and support bracket 21.
[0047] Slanted columns 23 are mounted at their lower ends to the rotatable support blocks 17. The upper ends of the slanted columns 23 support a pedestal 25. The columns 23 are formed steel I-beams of far less mass than a traditional tower and form generally vertical legs. Fixedly mounted on the pedestal 25 is the nacelle 27 of a horizontal-axis wind turbine WT. The wind turbine WT also includes a rotatable hub 29 carrying blades 31. The nacelle 27 includes a drive train and a generator. The pedestal 25 also supports a controller 33.
[0048] An adjustable-length third leg 35 is pivoted at its lower end to the support bracket 21 and is pivoted at its upper end to the pedestal 25. The third leg 35 is illustratively a hydraulic cylinder operated by a hydraulic pump, not shown, under the control of controller 33.
[0049] Lengthening or shortening the leg 35 causes the legs 23 to pivot with their supports 17, thereby changing the pitch of the wind turbine WT with respect to generally horizontal support structure HS, in this embodiment the floating platform (base) 5.
[0050] In operation, because the center of gravity of the generally upright support structure VS is behind the center of the rotatable inner ring 7, the force of wind striking the generally upright support structure VS and the turbine WT will push them into alignment with the wind. This automatic yaw control eliminates the need for the usual yaw motors at the top of the structure, as well as the torque exerted by those motors on the usual mast/tower structure. The weight associated with the automatic yaw mechanism is instead distributed to the bottom of the structure, where it helps stabilize the structure. This is particularly important in a floating wind turbine.
[0051] Pitch motion of the floating platform 5 is compensated by the adjustable third leg 35. The controller 33 is associated with sensors which measure pitch of the floating platform as well as the divergence from horizontal of the drive shaft driven by the hub 29. In response to changes in pitch, the controller lengthens or shortens the leg 35 to rotate the vertical legs 23 about the shafts 15 and maintain the wind turbine horizontal, to harvest the maximum power from the wind. If, as shown in
[0052] It is also envisioned that the controller 33 senses the speed of rotation of the wind turbine WT, or equivalently the electrical output of the wind turbine WT, and adjusts the pitch of the wind turbine WT to maintain a constant speed and electrical output in the region of wind speeds at which power shedding is required to maintain a constant output at rated power production. For this purpose, the controller 33 may receive signals from the same sensors utilized to control blade pitch in a conventional horizontal-axis wind turbine. It may also use artificial intelligence to predict pitch of the general horizontal support HS. Thus, in the wind regime between rated speed and cut-out, the pitch angle may be adjusted a few degrees away from horizontal to decrease efficiency and maintain constant output. When wind speeds increase to cut-out speed, the controller 33 tilts the wind turbine WT a larger amount, say fifteen degrees from horizontal, to stall the turbine. The usual brake on the drive shaft may also be used in conjunction with this pitch control.
[0053] The inventor has noted that the apparent wind speed and direction seen by each blade varies at every point along the blade's length, requiring the surface of the blade to be twisted. Conventional speed control, by altering the pitch of each blade, slows the rotation of the turbine by creating increased drag on the blade. This exerts tremendous forces on the blade, trying to break off the blade. Controlling speed of rotation by altering the pitch of the axis of rotation of the turbine, as in the present invention, does not create these enormous drag forces. It therefore is believed that the maximum power produced by the turbine can be increased and the cut-out wind speed can be increased, thereby greatly increasing the power production of the turbine in accordance with the present invention.
[0054] Roll of the floating platform (undulations of the platform from side to side relative to the generally upright support structure VS) does not affect performance of the wind turbine WT, but does stress the generally upright support structure VS. The spread legs 23 offer far better inherent resistance to these forces than does the traditional tower structure.
[0055] As shown in
[0056] As shown in
[0057] Another embodiment 101 of the stabilized horizontal-axis wind turbine of the invention is shown in
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[0059] In this embodiment, the generally horizontal support HS includes a rotatable inner ring 207 similar to the inner ring 7 of the first embodiment, but with a cross-brace 219. The outer ring is reduced to six jaws 203. As shown in
[0060] The wind turbine WT of this embodiment is supported by a generally vertical support structure VS having fixed vertical legs 223 like those of the first embodiment. The legs 23 support a wind turbine pedestal 225. Like the pedestal 25 of the first embodiment, the pedestal 225 is fixed. Like the embodiment of
[0061] As shown in
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[0064] As illustrated in
[0065] In this embodiment, the stator 575 includes a hub part 577 and a peripheral track 579. The hub 577 includes a raised ring 581 having bearing wheels 583 for engaging a sleeve 587 on the rotor part 585. The space below the raised ring 581 may house copper windings for the stator part of an inside-out electric motor.
[0066] The rotor part 585 includes a central sleeve 587, attached to a hub 589, and a peripheral support platform 591. Below the periphery of the platform 591, wheels 593 support the platform 591 on track 579 of the stator for rotation around the hub 577. The sleeve 587 may carry windings or other magnetic structure to interact with the windings in the stator to rotate the rotor part 585 and adjust the yaw of a generally vertical support structure and horizontal-axis wind turbine mounted on it. The wind turbine and its support preferably have a center of gravity behind the center of rotation of the rotor 585, so that the wind turbine automatically yaws into the wind. The inside-out motor, however, can assist the yawing movement when needed.
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[0068] The third wind turbine includes legs formed of slanted columns 623 mounted immovably to the inside tops of the inner legs 23 of the two lower wind turbines WT. A pedestal 625 at the top of the slanted columns 623 supports a horizontal-axis wind turbine WT.
[0069] To protect the wind turbines against air flow interference from each other, cowls 695 are installed around the blades of the lower two wind turbines. The cowls are attached to the legs 23 and 623, as shown, by cantilevered supports 697. If needed, supplemental supports such as spars 699 shown in
[0070] All web sites, publications, patents, and patent applications mentioned herein are hereby incorporated by reference.
[0071] In view of the above, it will be seen that the several objects and advantages of the present invention have been achieved and other advantageous results have been obtained.