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contributor authorV. A. Tucker
date accessioned2017-05-08T23:51:30Z
date available2017-05-08T23:51:30Z
date copyrightNovember, 1996
date issued1996
identifier issn0199-6231
identifier otherJSEEDO-28267#263_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/117602
description abstractA mathematical model for collisions between birds and propellor-type turbine rotors identifies the variables that can be manipulated to reduce the probability that birds will collide with the rotor. This study defines a safety index—the “clearance power density”—that allows rotors of different sizes and designs to be compared in terms of the amount of wind energy converted to electrical energy per bird collision. The collision model accounts for variations in wind speed during the year and shows that for model rotors with simple, one-dimensional blades, the safety index increases in proportion to rotor diameter, and variable speed rotors have higher safety indexes than constant speed rotors. The safety index can also be increased by enlarging the region near the center of the rotor hub where the blades move slowly enough for birds to avoid them. Painting the blades to make them more visible might have this effect. Model rotors with practical designs can have safety indexes an order of magnitude higher that those for model rotors typical of the constant speed rotors in common use today. This finding suggests that redesigned rotors could have collision rates with birds perhaps an order of magnitude lower than today’s rotors, with no reduction in the production of wind power. The empirical data that exist for collisions between raptors, such as hawks and eagles, and rotors are consistent with the model: the numbers of raptor carcasses found beneath large variable speed rotors, relative to the numbers found under small constant speed rotors, are in the proportions predicted by the collision model rather than in proportion to the areas swept by the rotor blades. However, uncontrolled variables associated with these data prevent a stronger claim of support for the model.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleUsing a Collision Model to Design Safer Wind Turbine Rotors for Birds
typeJournal Paper
journal volume118
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Solar Energy Engineering
identifier doi10.1115/1.2871791
journal fristpage263
journal lastpage269
identifier eissn1528-8986
keywordsCollisions (Physics)
keywordsDesign
keywordsRotors AND Wind turbines
treeJournal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1996:;volume( 118 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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