Comparison of cross-flow turbine performance under torque-regulated and speed-regulated control

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Authors

Polagye, Brian
Strom, Ben
Ross, Hannah
Forbush, Dominic
Cavagnaro, Robert

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AIP

Abstract

When experimentally evaluating the performance of a wind or water current turbine, one must impose a regulating torque on the turbine rotor by electrical or mechanical means. Some options limit this controlling torque to a purely resistive quantity, while servomotors and stepper motors allow torque to be applied in the direction of turbine rotation. Any control mode that results in net positive power for a turbine may be of interest for energy harvesting, and all of these are net “fluid-driven”. Here, we present experiments that characterize the power, torque, and force coefficients of a cross-flow turbine operated at a constant rotational speed or under a constant imposed control torque. Time- and phase-average performance coefficients are largely equivalent for the two strategies, though torque-regulated control is restricted to a narrower range of rotational speeds and the two strategies result in slightly different blade kinematics.

Description

Author's accepted proof, turbine experimental data, and code base to calculate performance coefficients and regenerate figures from experimental data.

Citation

Polagye, B., Strom, B., Ross, H., Forbush, D. and Cavagnaro, R.J., 2019. Comparison of cross-flow turbine performance under torque-regulated and speed-regulated control. Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, 11(4), p.044501.

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