SYSTEM RECORDING THE COLLISIONS OF FLYING ANIMALS WITH WIND TURBINES, ITS APPLICATION AND MANNER OF RECORDING COLLISIONS OF FLYING ANIMALS WITH WIND TURBINES WITH THE USE OF THE SYSTEM
20200166018 ยท 2020-05-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
F03D17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2260/80
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/8041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/8042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/805
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
International classification
Abstract
The object of the invention is a system recording the collisions of flying animals (9) with wind turbines (1) and indicating where they fell on the ground, which comprises a wind turbine (1) composed of a tower (2), a nacelle (3), a rotor (4) with blades (5) and a sensor unit comprising one sensor (6) and peripheral devices of the sensor, characterised in that the sensor (6) mounted on the nacelle (3) and/or tower (2) of the wind turbine (1) is a LIDAR sensor or a 3D light field camera or a 3D radar scanning the space around the wind turbine (1) in the field of view (7) of the sensor (6). The object of the invention is also the method of application of the above described system for recording the collisions of flying animals (9) with wind turbines (1) and indicating where they fell on the ground and the application of the system.
Claims
1. A system recording the collisions of flying animals with wind turbines (1) and indicating the position where they fallen to the ground, which comprises: a wind turbine (1) composed of a tower (2), a nacelle (3) and a rotor (4) with blades (5), a sensor system composed of a sensor (6) and peripheral devices, characterised in that the sensor (6) is mounted on the wind turbine (1) nacelle (3) and/or wind turbine tower (2), and the sensor is a LIDAR sensor or a 3D light field camera or a 3D radar scanning the space around the wind turbine (1) in the field of view (7) of the sensor (6).
2. The system, according to claim 1, characterised in that the sensor (6) is mounted on the wind turbine nacelle (3) and has a horizontal field of view of 180.
3. The system, according to claim 1, characterised in that the sensor (6) is mounted on the tower (2) and has a horizontal field of view of 360.
4. The system, according to claim 1, characterised in that the sensor (6) is a LIDAR sensor.
5. The system, according to claim 1, characterised in that the sensor (6) is a radar.
6. The system, according to claim 1, characterised in that the sensor (6) is a 3D light field camera.
7. The system, according to claim 4, characterised in that the range of the sensor (6) is about 300 m.
8. The system, according to any of the claims 1-6, characterised in that it additionally comprises one sensor (6a) or more further sensors (6a) mounted on the wind turbine (1) nacelle (3) and/or the wind turbine tower (2) in such manner that one sensor (6) and further sensors (6a) are communicated with one another by way of wired or wireless communication and cover multiple fields of view (7) and (7a) of a single sensor, respectively (6) and (6a).
9. The system, according to claim 1 or 8, characterised in that the sensor (6) is located on the wind turbine (1) tower (2) below the rotor (4) blade (5) range.
10. The system, according to claim 1 or 8, characterised in that it additionally contains at least one device (8) recording an image of a falling animal.
11. The system, according to claim 10, characterised in that devices (8) are video cameras, night vision cameras, thermal imaging cameras, photo cameras.
12. The method of recording flying animals collisions with wind turbines (1) with the use of the above described system, with the reservation of any of the above claims, which consists in tracing the trajectory (10) of a falling animal (9) after a collision with any part of the wind turbine (1), in particularly with the blades (5), via a sensor (6), characterised in that it continuous monitors the coordinates and speed of the falling animals in 3D space within the range of the field of view (7) of the sensor (6) once the animal (9) has entered the field of view of the sensor (6) until the animal (9) has fallen to the ground.
13. Application of the above defined system, according to any of the claims: 1-11, for recording the collisions of flying animals (9) with wind turbines (1) and indicating where they fell on the ground.
Description
[0057] The invention is presented in the picture, where:
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[0067] The examples below present particular embodiments of the invention. The examples show representative systems according to the invention, they are, however, not intended to limit the invention. The scope of routine tasks of an expert shall include application of general knowledge in the field and the examples presented below as well as the entire description to work out another system, however, within the framework of the registered system, that would fulfil the purpose of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1
[0068] Sensor 6 Velodyne VLS-128 of horizontal field of view 7 360, vertical field of view 7 40, range of operation 0-300 m, has been mounted under the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 in such manner that the axis of the field of view 7 of sensor 6 is directed perpendicularly to the vertical axis of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1. Sensor 6 records objects in its field of view that are below the height level of the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 and above the ground. Example 1 is presented in
EXAMPLE 2
[0069] Five sensors 6, 6a Velodyne VLS-128 of horizontal field of view 7 360, vertical field of view 7 40, range of operation 0-300 m, have been mounted under the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 next to one another in such manner that total the multiple of vertical fields of view 7 of individual sensors 6, 6a is 360. The set of sensors 6, 6a records objects in its field of view 7a that are below the height level of the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 and above the ground. Example 2 is presented in
EXAMPLE 3
[0070] Four sensors 6, 6a Velodyne VLS-128 of horizontal field of view 7 360, vertical field of view 7 40, range of operation 0-300 m, have been mounted under the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1, the first one on the side of the rotor 4 of the wind turbine 1, the second one on the rear wall of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1, the third one on the left side of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1, the fourth one on the right side of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1 in such manner that the axes of the fields of view 7 of all the sensors 6, 6a are directed perpendicularly to the vertical axis of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1 and the axes of the fields of view 7 of the third and fourth sensor 6a are directed perpendicularly to the axis of the rotor 4 of the wind turbine 1. The set of sensors 6, 6a records objects in its field of view 7a that are below the height level of the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 and above the ground. Example 3 is presented in
EXAMPLE 4
[0071] Three sensors 6, 6a Velodyne VLS-128 of horizontal field of view 7 360, and vertical field of view 7 40, range of operation 0-300 m, have been mounted as follows: one under the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 in such manner that the axis of the field of view 7 of sensor 6 is directed perpendicularly to the vertical axis of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1 and two sensors 6aon the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1, at the height level of 10 m above the ground, angular distance of 180 to each other in such manner that the axis of the field of view 7 of each of two sensors 6a are directed parallelly to the vertical axis of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1. The set of sensors 6, 6a records objects in its field of view 7a in such manner that sensor 6 mounted under the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 records the objects that are below the height level of the floor of the nacelle 3 of the wind turbine 1 and above the ground and sensors 6a mounted on the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1 record objects up to 300 m around the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1, thus increasing the height of the vertical field of view 7 with increasing the distance from the tower 2. The application of two sensors 6a prevents the occurrence of blind spots effected by the tower 3 of the wind turbine 1. Example 4 is presented in
EXAMPLE 5
[0072] The three sensors 6, 6a Velodyne VLS-128 of horizontal field of view 7 360, vertical field of view 7 40, range of operation 0-300 m, mounted on the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1, at the height of 15 m above the ground, at the angular distance of 120 to each other, in such manner that the axes of the field of view 7 of each of the three sensors 6, 6a are directed parallelly to the vertical axis of the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1. A set of sensors 6, 6a records objects in its field of view 7a in such manner that sensors 6, 6a record objects up to 300 m around the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1, increasing the height of the vertical field of view with increasing the distance from the tower 2. The application of three sensors 6,6a prevents the occurrence of blind spots effected by the tower 2 of the wind turbine 1. Example 5 is presented in
EXAMPLE 6
[0073] The system records the trajectory of animal 9 and identifies the position where it has fallen to the ground in the following manner. If a LIDAR sensor is used as sensor 6, the light beam emitted by a LIDAR sensor, when it meets the body of animal 9 on its way, returns to LIDAR receiver. The time between emitting the light beam and its return enables to obtain data on the location of the recorded animal 9 in space. The further the object is from a LIDAR sensor, the longer the time of return of the light beam reflected from an object. The so obtained data allow to recreate the trajectory 11 of the animal 9 flight and to read its speed and direction 10 of flight. Once a dead animal falls to the ground it rapidly loses speed, which makes it different from an alive animal, which must slowly decrease its speed and change the direction of flight 10 to avoid crashing into the ground. If 3D light field cameras are used as sensors, the position of the animal 9 with respect to the sensor 6 is recorded on the basis of the analysis of the direction of the recorded light rays reaching the sensor from a single point of a recorded scene. As a result, an image is produced containing information on the distance from the animal 9 to the sensor 6. If radars are used as sensors 6, the time between a signal emission and reception is measured. Example 6 is presented in