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A New Approach Toward Power Output Enhancement Using Multirotor Systems With Shrouded Wind Turbines
Author(s) -
Yuji Ohya,
Koichi Watanabe
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of energy resources technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.615
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1528-8994
pISSN - 0195-0738
DOI - 10.1115/1.4042235
Subject(s) - multirotor , turbine , wind power , diffuser (optics) , rotor (electric) , aerodynamics , power (physics) , tip speed ratio , marine engineering , control theory (sociology) , physics , automotive engineering , electrical engineering , aerospace engineering , engineering , mechanics , computer science , optics , light source , control (management) , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence
A multirotor system (MRS) is defined as containing more than one rotor in a single structure. MRSs have a great potential as a wind turbine system, saving mass and cost, and showing scale ability. The shrouded wind turbine with brimmed diffuser-augmented wind turbines (B-DAWT) has demonstrated power augmentation for a given turbine diameter and wind speed by a factor of about 2–5 compared with a bare wind turbine. In the present research, B-DAWTs are used in a multirotor system. The power output performance of MRSs using two and three B-DAWTs in a variety of configurations has been investigated in the previous works. In the present study, the aerodynamics of an MRS with five B-DAWTs, spaced in close vicinity in the same vertical plane normal to a uniform flow, has been analyzed. Power output increases of up to 21% in average for a five-rotor MRS configuration are achieved in comparison to that for the stand-alone configuration. Thus, when B-DAWTs are employed as the unit of a MRS, the total power output is remarkably increased. As the number of units for an MRS is increased from two to five, the increase in power output becomes larger and larger. This is because that the gap flows between B-DAWTs in a MRS are accelerated and cause lowered pressure regions due to vortex interaction behind the brimmed diffusers. Thus, a MRS with more B-DAWTs can draw more wind into turbines showing higher power output.

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