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Efficiency and Performance Analysis of Wind Turbine Generators

Large wind turbines operate at around 20-30 rpm, with an efficiency of 25-30%. Induction generators are preferred for their flexibility and simplicity. Blade efficiency is optimized at a tip-speed ratio of 4-6, and for grid-connected turbines, balancing rotor speed with fixed generator speed is crucial for power delivery.

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Efficiency and Performance Analysis of Wind Turbine Generators

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  1. Example : A 40-m, three bladed wind turbine produces 600 kW at a wind speed of 14 m/s. Air density is the standard 1.225 kg/m3. Under these conditions, a) At what rpm does the rotor turn when it operates with a TSR of 4.0? b) What is the tip speed of the rotor? c) If the generator needs to turn at 1800 rpm, what gear ratio is needed to match the rotor speed to the generator speed? d) What is the efficiency of the complete wind turbine (blades, gear box, generator) under these conditions? Solution

  2. so the overall efficiency of the wind turbine, from wind to electricity, is Notice that if the rotor itself is about 43% efficient, then the efficiency of the gear box times the efficiency of the generator would be about 66% (43% × 66% = 28.4%).

  3. The answers derived in the above example are fairly typical for large wind turbines. That is, a large turbine will spin at about 20–30 rpm; the gear box will speed that up by roughly a factor of 50–70; and the overall efficiency of the machine is usually in the vicinity of 25–30%. WIND TURBINE GENERATORS : The following figure shows the basic system for a wind turbine with a synchronous generator. The generator and blades are connected through a gear box to match the speeds required of each.

  4. Basic system for a wind turbine with a synchronous generator

  5. The Induction Generator : Most of the wind turbines use induction generators rather than the synchronous machines because : a) They do not rotate at a fixed speed. b) They do not need exciter, brushes, and slip rings that are needed by most synchronous generators. c) They are less complicated and less expensive and require less maintenance. ================================================================= Operation: a) When the stator is provided with three-phase excitation current and the shaft is connected to a wind turbine and gearbox, the machine

  6. will start operation by motoring up toward its synchronous speed. b) When the wind speed is sufficient to force the generator shaft to exceed synchronous speed, the induction machine automatically becomes a three- phase generator delivering electrical power back to its stator windings. Types of excitation of Induction generator : a)When the induction generator is connected to grid, it takes the magnetizing current from the grid it self. b)When the induction generator is stand alone, it takes the magnetizing current using 3-phase capacitors connected to its terminals. In this case the induction generator will be self excited.

  7. Self-excited inductance generator

  8. SPEED CONTROL FOR MAXIMUM POWER: a)The rotor efficiency Cp depends on the tip-speed ratio, TSR. b)Modern wind turbines operate best when their TSR is in the range of around 4–6, meaning that the tip of a blade is moving 4–6-times the wind speed. c)Ideally, for maximum efficiency, turbine blades should change their speed as the wind speed changes. d) Unless the rotor speed can be adjusted, blade efficiency Cp changes as wind speed changes. e) Blade efficiency is improved if its rotation speed changes with changing wind speed.

  9. Relation between blade efficiency and wind speed at constant rotation speed.

  10. Impact of rotational speed adjustment on delivered power.

  11. While blade efficiency benefits from adjustments in speed as illustrated in above figures, the generator may need to spin at a fixed rate in order to deliver current and voltage in phase with the grid that it is feeding. So, for grid-connected turbines, the challenge is to design machines that can somehow accommodate variable rotor speed and somewhat fixed generator speed—or at least attempt to do so. If the wind turbine is not grid-connected, the generator electrical output can be allowed to vary in frequency (usually it is converted to dc).

  12. Variable-frequency output of the induction generator is rectified, inverted, and filtered to produce acceptable 60-Hz power to the grid.

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