1 / 22

Working with Wind Energy

Working with Wind Energy. Stirling : March 2011 Nico Beute. Activity Goal. Build a wind turbine with simple materials The wind turbine must withstand the wind generated by a fan or hair dryer and rotate for up to 1 minute to lift a small object. Activity Objectives.

aziza
Download Presentation

Working with Wind Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Working with Wind Energy Stirling: March 2011 Nico Beute

  2. Activity Goal • Build a wind turbine with simple materials • The wind turbine must withstand the wind generated by a fan or hair dryer and rotate for up to 1 minute to lift a small object

  3. Activity Objectives • Learn about wind energy conversion • Design a wind turbine • Construct the wind turbine • Test the wind turbine • Evaluate Performance

  4. Why is this experiment useful to teachers and students? • Learn about wind energy and wind turbines • Learn about the concepts of forces and motion • Learn about engineering design • Learn how engineering can help solve societal challenges • Learn about teamwork and problem solving

  5. Principles & Standards for School Mathematics • Geometry: • Use visualization, spatial reasoning, and geometric modeling to solve problems • Analyze characteristics and properties of two- and three-dimensional geometric shapes and develop mathematical arguments about geometric relationships • Problem Solving: • Recognize and apply geometric ideas in areas outside of the mathematics classroom • Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies • Communication: • Communicate mathematical thinking coherently and clearly to peers, teachers, and others

  6. What is Wind? • Wind is a form of Solar Energy • The sun heats the Earth’s surface at varying rates • The air above the warmer areas heats up, becomes less dense and rises • Cooler air from adjacent higher-pressure areas moves to the lower-pressure areas • That movement = wind

  7. Where in the World is Wind?

  8. What is Wind Energy? • The process by which the wind is used to generate mechanical energy or electricity • Wind turbines convert the kinetic energy in the wind into mechanical and electrical energy

  9. A Wind Turbine • The wind hits the blades… • Shaft leads to a gearbox whose output leads to a generator to make electricity • Usually has 2 or 3 blades WIND

  10. The Turbine Blade • Operates much like an airplane wing • Low-pressure air forms on the downwind side of the blade • The low-pressure air pocket then pulls the blade toward it, causing the rotorto turn

  11. Many blade designs

  12. Objective • To enable engineers to lead a training session for teachers on an engineering related topic

  13. Engineers: Understand the educational system • Educational terms • Curriculum • Outcomes {CO , DO & LO} • Assessment standards • Educational environment • Knowledge of learners • Knowledge of teachers

  14. How • Make it practical – give examples from the workplace • Keep it simple • Try it out today

  15. Consider the environment • Where do we get energy from? • Is our energy source sustainable? • Do we want nuclear energy? • Is wind energy affordable? • What types of energy harm our environment? • Do we consider social and economic issues?

  16. Your Challenge • Design, construct and test your own wind turbine design • Lift weight – 15 cmas quickly as possible • Maximum1 minute • No human interaction! • Blowdryer at least30cm away from turbine > 1ft, 30cm

  17. Materials • wooden sticks, spoons • bendable wire • string • paperclips • rubber bands • toothpicks • aluminum foil, plastic wrap • tape, glue • wooden dowels • paper, cardboard

  18. Turbine Requirements • Must have a rotor shaft around which to wind up given weight • Must be freestanding (no human interaction) • Must use only materials provided > 1ft, 30cm

  19. Test Procedure • Blowdryer at least 30 cm away from turbine • No human interaction with turbine • Attach weight around rotor • Up to 1 minute to wind up weight for 15cm • Record time to wind up weight > 1ft, 30cm

  20. Procedure • Teams of 3, at least 1 teacher per group • Be a primary school learner • Consider educational principles • Develop and sketch your design • Construct initial design • Preliminary test • Modify design, if necessary • Final test - Show Yvonne

  21. Evaluate Your Design • Efficiency of design may depend on • Cost of materials • Speed (rotations per minute) • Power (time to wind weight) • Possible measure of efficiency: • Eff. = (Cost of materals) / (time [sec] to wind weight) • Are two designs that have the same rotational speed equally as “good”?

More Related