Abstract

To elucidate the wind-direction dependence of the rotor performance in closely spaced vertical-axis wind turbines, wind-tunnel experiments were performed at a uniform wind velocity. In the experiments, a pair/trio of three-dimensional printed model turbines with a diameter of D = 50 mm was used. The experiments were performed systematically by applying incremental adjustments to the rotor gap g and rotational direction of each rotor and by changing the wind direction. For tandem layouts, the rotational speed of the downwind rotor is 75–80% that of an isolated rotor, even at g/D = 10. For the average rotational speed of the rotor pair, an origin-symmetrical and a line-symmetrical distribution are observed in the co-rotating and inverse-rotating configurations, respectively, thereby demonstrating the wind-direction dependence for the rotor pair. The inverse-rotating trio configuration yields a higher average rotational speed than the co-rotating trio configuration for any rotor spacing under the ideal bidirectional wind conditions. The maximum average rotational speed should be obtained for a wind direction of θ = 0° in the inverse-rotating trio configuration. The wind-direction dependence of the rotational speeds of the three turbines was explained via flow visualization using a smoke-wire method and velocity field study using two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics.

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