FIXED AND PITCHING BLADES, SPAR SHAFT, BEARINGS AND MATERIALS FOR MARINE CURRENT TURBINE
20220341386 · 2022-10-27
Inventors
- James George Purnell DEHLSEN (Santa Barbara, CA, US)
- Peter STRICKER (Santa Barbara, CA, US)
- Ole Kils (Santa Barbara, CA)
- Tyler MAYER (Santa Barbara, CA, US)
- Henry SWALES (Santa Barbara, CA, US)
Cpc classification
Y02E10/30
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
F05B2240/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2240/53
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B17/061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2260/79
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B3/145
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2210/11
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
A marine current turbine rotor comprises a hub and fixed and two or more pitchable blade sections configured to reduce bending moment loads on the pitch bearings and enable the use of non-standard, low-cost structural materials for the hub, blades, and pitch shaft. A submersible pitch drive mechanism or linkage in the hub rotates the pitch shaft to cause the pitchable blade section to move to a specified pitch position. The hub cavity is configured to be “wet” without the expense and maintenance requirement of seals to prevent water intrusion, utilizing water-lubricated pitch bearings.
Claims
1. A variable pitch, hub, and rotor system for a marine turbine comprising: a plurality of blades, each comprising a fixed blade section and a pitching blade section aligned coaxially and connected by way of a rotatable spar pitch shaft, a central fixed hub at an apex of adjacent fixed blade sections defining an axis of rotation of a rotor driving a main shaft that drives an electric power generating device, a monolithic fixed blade hub comprising a central fixed hub and a plurality of fixed blade sections joined to form a single structure, an integrated spar pitch shaft that transitions from a structural member of the pitching blade section into a rotatable shaft within the fixed blade section, a pair of water-lubricated bearings that allow the spar pitch shaft to rotate axially and efficiently react the pitching blade section forces into the fixed blade hub structure, and a fixed hub structure that is flooded by the ambient water environment and houses a variable pitch actuation system attached to the proximal end of the spar pitch shaft.
2. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein a monolithic fixed blade hub comprising a central fixed hub and a plurality of fixed blade sections joined to form a single structure is made of a moldable cementitious material with reinforcement rods.
3. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the spar pitch shaft within the pitching blade section comprises cementitious and reinforcement materials.
4. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the spar pitch shaft comprises a metal tube filled with cementitious material.
5. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 4, wherein configuration of cementitious and metal materials in the spar pitch shaft causes the pitching blade section to achieve neutral or near-neutral buoyancy.
6. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the spar pitch shaft existing within the pitching blade section comprises a hollow metal tube surrounded by cementitious material and reinforcing rods within the profile of the pitching blade section.
7. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 6, wherein configuration of cementitious, metal and reieforcement materials in the pitching blade section achieves neutral or near-neutral buoyancy.
8. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the rotation axis of each pitch shaft is located forward of the center of effort of the blade such that a failure of the actuation system causes a passive pitch to feather.
9. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the bearings operate in the ambient fluid.
10. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the spar pitch shafts enter the fixed blade hub and are aligned side-by-side.
11. The variable pitch, hub, and rotor system according to claim 1, wherein the spar pitch shafts attached to pitching blade sections may be inserted or removed from the fixed blade sections from outside without removing the rotor.
12. The marine current turbine as shown in
13. The marine current turbine rotor system as shown in
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] For a complete understanding of the present invention, the objects, and advantages thereof, reference is now made to the ensuing descriptions taken in connection with the accompanying drawings briefly described as follows.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0025] Preferred embodiments of the present invention and their advantages may be understood by referring to
[0026] The present invention provides a turbine rotor and hub that eliminates many costly and maintenance-intensive components while maintaining equivalent functionality, improved reliability, and increased performance. The advanced rotor design has no shaft seals around the blade root and no contamination-sensitive oil-lubricated bearings. The blade does not compromise a hydrofoil transitioning to a cylindrical shaft attached to a bearing at the blade root and it is not connected to the root by highly loaded, pre-tension-sensitive T-bolts, which requires periodic re-tensioning.
[0027] The invention comprises a monolithic, hydrodynamically-profiled spar within the fixed-pitch blade section (“fixed blade section”) extending radially outward in the rotor plane from a central fixed hub (“fixed hub”) to a radius on the blade span from which the variable pitch blade section (“pitching blade section”) extends, supported by separate bearings (“pitch bearings”) on a rigid pitch shaft (“spar pitch shaft”) within the fixed blade section. These pitch bearings have sufficient separation to greatly spread the moment loads on the spar pitch shaft.
[0028] The use of a monolithic structure comprised of fixed blade sections and fixed hub (“fixed blade hub”) with independent pitching blade sections enables, i) alternative structural materials, designs, and fabrication processes to be implemented for the fabrication of the fixed blade hub, spar pitch shaft and pitching blade sections, ii) reduced pitch bearing moment loads with a smaller active pitching blade section, iii) the use of spread bearings to support the spar pitch shaft, iv) reduced torque capacity requirement for the pitching system, iii) the use of water-lubricated bushings or bearings (in following references, “pitch bearings” will refer to bearings or bushings interchangeably), and v) the use of a wet/flooded hub interior precluding the need for seals. The invention comprises a fixed blade section at the inner (root) region and an active pitching blade section located outward on the rotor radius, where higher blade translational velocities increase the need to adjust pitch angle to optimize hydrodynamic efficiency and manage blade loading when the turbine is operating at capacity in fast-moving currents. The hydrodynamic profile of the fixed blade section provides added hydrodynamic lift during operation. The rotor/machine may be stopped from generating power due to spoiled lift of the pitching blade section and increased drag that opposes lift produced by the fixed blade section by feathering the pitching blade section.
[0029] Conventional blades require large diameter blade root bearings to support moment loads at the hub, however, the novel fixed hub combined with the fixed blade sections carrying the blade root loads provides two moment loading benefits. First, it reduces the length of the active, pitching blade section by assigning a portion of the blade length to the fixed blade section. It reduces the moment loading on the pitch bearings compared with conventional, full-length pitching blades, which present greater active blade area. Second, the fixed blade sections provide an extended, rigid structure to support at least two pitch bearings per spar pitch shaft. The bearings, which are spaced apart from each other, react the moment and shear loads produced by the pitching blade section, instead of concentrating such loads on a single, highly loaded slewing-ring bearing at the blade root practiced with conventional blade designs.
[0030] The present invention provides several other key features. Pitch rotation of the spar pitch shaft through water-lubricated bushings or bearings eliminates the need for sealed, corrosion-prone roller bearings at the blade root. The reduced inertia and pitching force associated with a shorter pitching blade section, compared with conventional, full-length pitching blades, reduces loads on the pitch system, which allows for increased pitching duty-cycles and increased life of the pitch system. This factor may be crucial when considering the high duty-cycle associated with two pitch changes per rotor revolution to compensate for velocity shear in the flow profile of a tidal or ocean current turbine site.
[0031] In addition, the spar pitch shaft design eliminates the need for the cylindrical blade root transition to accommodate a conventional, large diameter slewing-ring bearing. This extends the fixed blade sections' effective hydrodynamic span to increase energy capture from the rotor's central area, with flow acceleration by deflection of flow around the turbine hub and nacelle. The fixed blade hub provides beam support for spar pitch shafts inserted into the fixed blade sections that carry bending moment and shear loads from the pitching blade sections, nominally balancing the loads from each blade against each other. The fixed blade hub can be produced as a single structure, optimized for cost-efficiency, structural integrity, and hydrodynamic performance. The relative length of the fixed blade sections and the pitching blade sections may be optimized for capital cost, lifetime of fixed and articulating components, operations and maintenance costs, and hydrodynamic performance.
[0032] With reduced critical bending moment stresses, lower cost, corrosion-resistant structural materials, such as geopolymer concrete composites with basalt or other reinforcing materials, may be used to fabricate the fixed blade hub. This presents a further distinction from ocean current blade designs based on conventional wind turbine blades, where blade mass contributes to gravity-induced “lead-lag” loads on the blade roots and bearings on every revolution of the rotor. In the case of a blade submerged in water, the buoyancy force opposes the gravitational force so that for a material such as geopolymer concrete, which could be too massive to consider for a wind turbine blade, neutral buoyancy may be achieved, thus resulting in minimal lead-lag loads.
[0033] Offsetting buoyancy also enables the spar pitch shaft to be designed as a geopolymer-concrete-filled metal tube, similar to the concrete-filled-steel-tubes (CF ST) utilized in the construction industry, thus significantly increasing stiffness and bending strength over an unfilled tube without increasing its outside dimensions. Installation/replacement of the pitching blade section requires less lifting and handling capability than needed to replace a conventional blade, and the “stabbing” of the spar pitch shaft into the pitch bearings of the fixed blade hub allows for blade installation/changeout with far less effort than removing conventional slew-ring blade root T-bolts and handling a full-length blade. Marinized pitch actuators and seawater-lubricated bushings or bearings allows the inside volume of the hub to be flooded, eliminating the need for seals and lubricants harmful to marine life
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[0035] Referring to
[0036] Two blades, each comprising of a pitching blade section (6) and a fixed blade section (5), emanating from the fixed hub (4) directly opposite each other, experience drag and thrust loads imposed on their upstream facing surfaces that are nominally counterbalanced by each blade relative to the other. This alignment of two fixed blade sections across the hub enables the combined structure (fixed blade hub) (3) to perform as a rigid beam resisting bending loads imposed on the blades by the water flow. The monolithic fixed blade hub (3) allows for novel materials such as geopolymer concrete with basalt fiber reinforcement or other reinforced cementitious materials to be used in the fabrication of this structure, as well as for the spar pitch shaft (7) within the pitching blade section (6). In another embodiment, the spar pitch shaft (7) is constructed as a metal tube filled with a cementitious material such as geopolymer concrete or Portland cement to enhance its stiffness and bending strength. The pitch bearings (8 and 9) in each fixed blade section (5) are separated by a “spread distance” (S) that reduces the tangential bearing reaction forces from pitching blade section (6) moment loads, in direct proportion to the spread distance (S).
[0037] The pitch bearings (8 and 9) are water-lubricated to avoid the need for sealing against seawater intrusion and eliminate maintenance requirements of an oil-based lubrication system. The fixed hub (4) cavity is similarly designed to be a wet environment to avoid the need for seals on the spar pitch shaft (7) penetrations in fixed blade hub (3). The pitch drive (not shown) is a submersible, electric or hydraulic device contained within the fixed hub (4) and commanded through the main shaft (13), or may be an arrangement of linkages driven through the turbine main shaft (13) (not shown).
[0038] As shown in
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[0044] The invention has been described herein using specific embodiments for illustration only. However, it will be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that the principles of the invention may be embodied in other ways. Therefore, the invention should not be regarded as limited in scope to the specific embodiments and claims.