Abstract

We study the vortex dynamics of a two-dimensional H-rotor wind turbine using a Navier-Stokes solver. The turbulence model with the wall function is used as the turbulence closure. A sliding mesh technique is employed to handle the blade rotation. The vortex-blade interaction is systematically investigated and its influence on the force generation is discussed. Our simulations show that the vortex-blade interaction largely depends on the solidity and tip speed ratio. We further study the impact of solidity on the turbine performance. Our simulations show that the peak torque per blade decreases with the solidity while the peak torque azimuthal angle increases with the solidity. Our simulations also show that the increase in the azimuthal angle is more significant at low tip speed ratios than at high tip speed ratios. The impact of blade thickness is studied. Our simulations show that a thicker airfoil has a higher torque coefficient than a thinner airfoil. However, because for the thinner airfoil its peak torque occurs at a high tip speed ratio, the thinner airfoil has an overall higher power coefficient than the thicker airfoil.

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