On the wake re-energization of the X-Rotor vertical-axis wind turbine via the vortex-generator strategy
David Bensason (TU Delft - Wind Energy)
A. Sciacchitano (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)
Carlos Ferreira (TU Delft - Wind Energy)
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Abstract
Wake losses are a significant source of inefficiency in wind farm arrays, hindering the development of high-energy-density wind farms offshore. Studies have demonstrated the potential of vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs) to achieve high-energy-density configurations, due to their increased rate of wake recovery compared with their horizontal-axis counterparts. Recent works have demonstrated a wake control technique for VAWTs that utilizes blade pitch to accelerate the wake recovery, hereinafter referred to as the “vortex-generator” method. The present work is an experimental investigation of the wake topology using this control technique for the novel X-Rotor VAWT. The time-averaged wake topology of the X-Rotor has been measured by stereoscopic particle-image velocimetry at three fixed-pitch conditions of the top blades, namely pitch-in, pitch-out, and a baseline case with no pitch applied. The results demonstrate the wake recovery mechanism linked to the streamwise vorticity system of the rotor and the mechanisms that lead to a streamwise momentum recovery, where the pitched-in case injects high-momentum flow from above the rotor while ejecting the wake from the sides. In contrast, the pitched-out case operates in a mirrored fashion, with high-momentum flow injected into the wake from the sides while low-momentum flow is ejected out axially above the rotor. These modes of operation demonstrate a significant increase in the available power for hypothetical downstream turbines, reaching as high as a factor of 2.2 two rotor diameters downstream compared with the baseline case. The pitched-in case exhibits a higher rate of momentum recovery in the wake, compared with the pitch-out configuration.