November 14, 2023
By
Tina Casey
New Floating Offshore Wind Turbine
Features Vertical Axis Technology
A new vertical axis design for
floating offshore wind turbines tilts in the water like the mast of a
sailboat (courtesy of World Wide Wind).
New Floating Offshore Wind Turbine Features Vertical
Axis Technology
ARPA-E, circular
economy, floating
offshore wind, floating
offshore wind turbines, norway, Recycling, University
of Texas, US
Department of Energy (DOE), usa, vertical
axis wind turbines, Waste
Reduction
The Norwegian startup World Wide Wind is on a
mission to prove that vertical axis wind turbines can conquer the
floating offshore wind market. That’s going to be a tough row to hoe,
but the researchers have been building the case for a new generation
of turbines to cut costs and suck more power from offshore locations,
too.
Vertical Axis Offshore Wind Turbines Are Respectable
Now
CleanTechnica has seen some
pretty strange-looking vertical axis wind turbines over the years. In
a vertical axis system, the blades rotate
around a central pole like a merry-go-round, or in some cases, an egg
beater. That provides plenty of leeway for variety in design.
Vertical axis technology also allows for more
variation in the height of the turbine compared to the familiar
three-bladed, horizontal axis turbines that sit on top of a tall tower
like a pinwheel.
Additionally, vertical axis design provides for a
more compact silhouette than conventional wind turbines, which rely on
longer blades and taller towers for maximum efficiency.
The vertical configuration got a
bad rap in the early 2000s, when its main application was in the
market for small-scale
wind turbines in urban
areas and other settings where
large-footprint systems are impractical. At the time, performance
and certification standards were yet to be
developed, leading to issues with unkept promises and underperformance
(see more vertical
axis coverage here).
Now that the regulatory
environment has stabilized, researchers on the prowl for
next-generation renewable energy technology are taking another look at
vertical axis engineering, including offshore as
well as onshore applications at the megawatt scale.
ARPA-E Is Prowling For New Vertical Axis Floating
Offshore Wind Turbines
Energy stakeholders are
particularly interested in the potential for vertical axis technology
to cut the cost of offshore wind. That includes the US Department of
Energy, which has tasked its high
risk, high reward ARPA-E office with
administering the ATLANTIS floating offshore wind program, aimed at new
and “potentially disruptive” designs in
floating offshore wind technology for deep-water applications.
Keep an eye on the University of Texas at Dallas,
where researchers at the school won a $3.3 million grant in 2020 to
develop a new vertical axis design for floating offshore wind
turbines.
“VAWTs [vertical axis wind turbines] offer
advantages over traditional offshore wind designs because they have a
lower vertical center of gravity and center of pressure; require a
smaller, less expensive floating platform; do not need yaw control
systems; and have the potential to reduce operations and maintenance
costs due to platform-level access to the drivetrain,” ARPA-E
explains.
The UT-Dallas system features aero-elastic
tailoring of the rotor and a system that coordinates active plasma
on-blade flow control with rotor speed control.
A New Twist On Floating Vertical Axis Offshore Wind
Turbines
With the funding period set to close in 2024,
keep an eye out for an update from UT-Dallas. In the meantime, World
Wide Wind caught some attention from the clean tech media when it
introduced its new floating offshore wind turbine concept last year,
and it hasn’t been letting the grass grow under its feet.
The device, which looks something
like a
rotor sail with hoop skirts, is designed to
remediate the instability and power loss issues that bedevil
conventional vertical axis technology. Instead of a single set of
rotating blades, it deploys pairs of blades that rotate in opposite
directions.
According to WWW, it’s the first use of
counter-rotating blade sets in a vertical axis wind turbine.
Adding to the odd-looking silhouette is another
vertical axis design choice aimed specifically at floating offshore
wind applications. Conventional wind turbines are designed with the
generator housed in a structure called a nacelle, located at the top
of the tower where the blades are attached. Instead, WWW places the
generator at the base of the shaft. The weighted bottom enables the
shaft to tilt at an angle with the wind like the mast of a sailboat,
rather than sitting bolt upright in the water.
Putting The Circular Economy To Work
On November 1, WWW announced that
it has signed an agreement with the construction and engineering firm
AF Gruppen to test a
19-meter prototype of its vertical axis
floating offshore wind design at an AFG facility at Vats, located on
the southwest coast of Norway.
If all goes according to plan, the 30-kilowatt
prototype will be followed by a 1.2 megawatt pilot project, with an
eye on commercial production at 24 megawatts before 2030. The
potential for a 40-megawatt version is also somewhere out there on the
horizon.
World Wide Wind notes that the engineering of a
vertical axis turbine is relatively simple, leading to supply chain
savings and opening up more opportunities for local manufacturing.
The supply chain angle also
involves reducing the lifecycle carbon footprint of manufacturing wind
turbines. With that in mind, last January WWW entered into an
agreement with the leading Norwegian firm Hydro to develop recycled
aluminum as a sustainable material for its
floating offshore wind turbine.
In terms of supporting the
recycling principles of the circular economy, the Hydro agreement
complements the prototype testing partnership. AFG is both a
construction and a deconstruction firm, with extensive experience in decommissioning
and recycling offshore oil and gas
structures in the North Sea.
But Will It Work?
As for whether or not WWW can
shepherd its technology past the prototype stage, that remains to be
seen. Plenty of vertical axis turbines have come and gone over the
years, so CleanTechnica generally
exercises caution when covering news in this area. We look for
indications that the technology has raised interest among notable
public funding agencies, investors, academic institutions and other
experts with a professional reputation at stake.
For example, last week we took
note of a
new onshore wind turbine concept supported
by the Bill Gates energy innovation fund, Breakthrough Energy
Ventures. The wings-and-rails configuration is like nothing ever seen
before, but apparently Breakthrough and other investors see some
potential.
Another indication of newsworthiness is interest
from industry partners. WWW falls into that category through its
partnerships with Hydro and AFG. Hydro was tasked with assembling
industry partners as part of its agreement with WWW, and the roster
now includes the firms Jotun, Moelven, and FRAM Marine.
Supporting agencies featured on WWW’s website
include the independent research organization SINTEF, the maritime
classification society DNV, the wind energy consulting firm Kjeller
Vindteknikk, and the Norwegian wind energy development agency FME
NorthWind, among others.
Sweden’s Uppsala University is
also on board, which is interesting on account of the school’s history
of activities in the vertical
axis wind turbine area.
Yet another indication is whether or not general
R&D support is emerging in a new direction, and it is. One example of
next-generation innovation in the vertical axis field is the Sandia
National Laboratories branch of the US Department of Energy, which has
been floating — so to speak — the idea of a vertical axis floating
offshore wind turbine that doesn’t have a central axis at all.
Instead, it deploys guy wires to hold the blades in position.
“These wires can be shortened or lengthened to
adjust for changing wind conditions to maximize energy capture while
controlling strain,” Sandia explained in a recap of the project last
year. “Additionally, replacing the shaft with wires reduces the weight
of the turbine even more, allowing the floating platform to be even
smaller and less expensive.”
CleanTechnica is reaching
out to the lab for an update, so stay tuned for more on that.
Follow me @tinamcasey on Bluesky, Threads, Post, or LinkedIn.
Image: A
new vertical axis design for
floating offshore wind turbines tilts in the water like the mast of a
sailboat (courtesy of World Wide Wind).
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
509 995 1879
Cell, Pacific Time Zone.
General office:
509-254
6854
4501 East Trent
Ave.
Spokane, WA 99212
|