The Goal:
Extract as much electrical energy from the current location using wind and solar.
Provide automatic backup power in power failures for three days.
Integrate with the current residential living structure but have the systems in place on the new barn.
Have system grid tied to export excess power to the grid.
Provide all electrical energy for the new barn.
Site analysis:
The current site, from a wind perspective, has very little. The bulk of the wind occurs in the heating season months. It is "bursty" and turbulent in nature. The location is down in a shallow valley among corn fields and scattered trees and houses. The location is fairly sunny following the typical sun patterns of central PA. The available wind runs counter to the available sun seasonally.
Current available equipment etc..:
HAWT's would not work very well unless placed very high (over 75'). I view this as not cost effective and aesthetically un-desirable as well as too electrically inviting. I have has my share of lightning issues. The challenge is too design a turbine and gen using home brew types of construction. I have designed an axial gen that is a re-engineering of the current designs out there. I have created a design that I believe will be very efficient and be able to generate cut in voltage (48VDC) at around 30 RPM. The turbine I am designing is a VAWT. I chose this for its ability to "take" wind automatically, without adjustment, from any direction, roof top mounted as well, and a good balance between lift and drag. The current VAWT designs out there to date are many, but I could not find one that had the right "mix" of lift and drag that I was looking for and was very strong and fairly easy to design and build. I also wanted a 5KW burst capability (under 40MPH winds), so it was not going to be small as allot of the VAWT's out there. The system will be tied to a 48VDC battery bank which will have a 6KW grid tied inverter hooked to it. The inverter will run in "blocks" of time based on a top "kick in" battery bank voltage and run down to a "kick off" battery bank voltage. This will accomplish two things. The inverter will run in relatively big chunks of time and the battery bank will gather energy as soon as the gen voltage "cracks" over 48VDC without any sync issues or delays for same. As a side note, more than 50% of the time when we have power failures, high winds are the cause or are present at the time of failure. This will most likely mean the system will actually be generating substantial amounts of power during a power failure, when it is most needed. The system also has to be able to accept PV power additions later in the future, without overly complicated connection equipment, use the existing wind infrastructure.
Generator Design etc..:
Previous links relevant to this;
http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2007/11/30/0312/9434
http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2007/12/7/232131/157
http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2008/2/25/24459/4156
http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2008/3/3/213428/1577
These are the most useful posts of all of them. Some of the others get a bit dicey..
Anyway, the design went through many changes in my head. Originally I was after a very high voltage for a direct connect to a grid tied inverter. But, I then began from scratch thinking about the site. What kind of wind do I have?? How does it blow most of the time?? Etc.. When I looked at the direct connect inverters for PV and wind, I noticed that there were time delay issues with getting the gen "sync'ed" to the grid, lasting a few seconds usually. That delay in low bursty winds would mean that a worthwhile portion of the available energy at those levels would not be gathered, being wasted by the inverter trying to frequently sync up. Secondly, there were the peak power generation issues. What do you do in the case of those occasional high winds that would push the inverter over the edge? I am a firm believer in K.I.S.S. but I also want high efficiency in my designs. To put it simply, I want my cake and eat it too. Additionally, I wanted every watt possible no matter how small to be put into my KWH piggy bank... The solution was a direct connect to a medium sized battery bank with a low voltage grid tied inverter hooked to it, with the charge function disabled. This solved the inverter overload problem, beating up on the batteries instead, and the inverter would run in relatively big chunks of time, yet the gen energy would be captured instantly above cut in voltage at very low turbine RPM's, extracting even tiny amounts of energy. Also, in very high winds once the battery bank was full, the inverter would kick on pulling 6 KW from the batteries keeping them from over charging. Protecting the gen would be fairly easy using thermal snap disks in the stator tied to relays on the gen output. When the stator gets too hot, the snap disks close and open the normally closed relays, free wheeling the turbine. This has no effect on the inverter which is tied to the batteries, not the gen. Any power surges from the gen are buffered by the battery bank, protecting the inverter. In theory at least, it seems the best of all worlds with a fairly simple design. The only loss in the design is the leakage power loss from the batteries. This is why the bank does not want to be too big. The bigger the bank, the greater the leakage loss in total energy.
Target Min Energy Goal for Turbine/Gen Combo:
A rough target for the energy output for the completed wind turbine/gen system is as follows:
- MPH = 2.235 ms 24 watts
- MPH = 3.13 ms 66 watts
- MPH = 4.47 ms 192 watts
- MPH = 6.7 ms 647 watts
- MPH = 8.94 ms 1536 watts
- MPH = 11.17 ms 3000 watts
- MPH = 13.41 ms 5187 watts
These numbers reflect a 35% energy extraction from the wind (Turbine efficiency) and a 75% gen efficiency (Electrical efficiency). Sweep area is 13.38m^2 (4' x 36').
Rectifier setup:
The rectifier heat sink and 6 - 1GBT's are shown below. There is not any particular engineering reason why this was the starting point in terms of real parts to the system. Just more of a function of spotting things and availability issues. The small full wave in the above center is a backup and is for emergency use only. Its terminals are connected to each other for protection reasons. The 1BGT's gate and emitter terminals are shorted for the same reasons as per a suggestion on this forum.
(connections not made at time of photos)
Costs:
Heat sink: 57.50
Sold heat sinks: (9.95)
6 - 1GBT's 1200V, 600A 106.25
Full wave 800V, 110A 14.00
S&H 28.34
SS nuts/bolts/washers 19.06
End mill machining 35.00
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$250.20
The heat sinks I sold were ones I thought I would use, but turned out to be too small. I have had them for over 10 years.

