Wind Energy Basics The Kidwind Project .

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Wind Energy Basics The Kidwind Project The Kidwind Project www.kidwind.org www.kidwind.org

Transcript of Wind Energy Basics The Kidwind Project .

Page 1: Wind Energy Basics The Kidwind Project .

Wind EnergyBasics

The Kidwind ProjectThe Kidwind Projectwww.kidwind.orgwww.kidwind.org

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What is Electricity?

Electricity is energy transported by

the motion of electrons

Electricity is energy transported by

the motion of electrons

**We do not make electricity, we CONVERT other energy sources into electrical energy****We do not make electricity, we CONVERT

other energy sources into electrical energy**

Conversion is the name of the gameConversion is the name of the gameKidWind Project | www.kidwind.org

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Faraday Effect

• Faraday Effect

• Basic Concepts• Voltage – V – Potential to Move Charge (volts)• Current – I – Charge Movement (amperes or amps)• Resistance – R – V = IxR (R in =ohms)• Power – P = IxV = I2xR (watts)

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How Does a Generator Work?

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Electricity!

• How much would it cost to run this 100 Watt bulb for a full day (24 hrs)?

• 100 Watts x 24 hours = 2400 Watt Hours (2400 Watt Hours = 2.4 Kilowatt Hours)

• 2.4 kWh x $0.08/kWh = $0.19

• What about this 25 Watt CFL light bulb, which produces the same amount of light?

• 25 Watts x 24 hours = 600 Watt Hours (600 Watt Hours = 0.6 Kilowatt Hours)

• 0.6 kWh x $0.08/kWh = $0.05

More efficient light bulbs are great, but what is the BEST way to conserve electricity and reduce our consumption of fossil fuels???

TURN IT OFF!!!Be conscious of your energy choices!

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Where do we get our electricity?

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What is a Fossil Fuel???

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What is “Renewable Energy?”

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Types of Electricity Generating Windmills

Small (10 kW)•Homes•Farms•Remote Applications (e.g. water

pumping, telecom sites, icemaking)

Large (250 kW - 2+MW)

•Central Station Wind Farms

•Distributed Power

Intermediate (10-250 kW)•Village Power•Hybrid Systems•Distributed

Power

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Parts of a Wind Turbine

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Wind Turbine Perspective

Nacelle56 tons

Tower3 sections

Workers Blade112’ long

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Large Wind Turbines

• 450’ base to blade• Each blade 112’• Span greater than 747• 163+ tons total• Foundation 20+ feet deep• Rated at 1.5 – 5 megawatt• Supply at least 350 homes

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Yawing – Facing the WindYawing – Facing the Wind• Active Yaw (all medium &

large turbines produced today, & some small turbines from Europe)– Anemometer on nacelle tells

controller which way to point rotor into the wind

– Yaw drive turns gears to point rotor into wind

• Passive Yaw (Most small turbines)– Wind forces alone direct rotor

• Tail vanes• Downwind turbines

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Importance of Wind Speed• No other factor is more

important to the amount of power available in the wind than the speed of the wind

• Power is a cubic function of wind speed– V X V X V

• 20% increase in wind speed means 73% more power

• Doubling wind speed means 8 times more power

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Calculation of Wind Power

•Power in the wind Effect of air density,

– Effect of swept area, A– Effect of wind speed, V

R

Swept Area: A = πR2 Area of the circle swept by the rotor (m2).

Power in the Wind = ½ρAV3

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Carnage!

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Jobs in the Wind Industry

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Construction

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Public Relations/Organizing Support

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Operations/Maintenance

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Maintenance

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Engineering/Design

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Environmental Impact Assessment

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Wind Power is Fun!

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Questions???

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The KidWind Projectwww.kidwind.org