Title: Wind Energy Educators Workshop
1Wind Energy Educators Workshop
Michael Arquin The Kidwind Project St. Paul,
MN michael_at_kidwind.org
2What is KidWind?
The KidWind Project is a team of teachers,
students, engineers and practitioners exploring
the science behind wind energy in classrooms
around the US. Our goal is to introduce as many
people as possible to the elegance of wind power
through hands-on science activities which are
challenging, engaging and teach basic science
principles.
KidWind Project www.kidwind.org
3Why Wind Education in K-12 ?
- Students learn science/math standards
- Lessons are completely scalable from elementary
through college level - Addresses myths regarding wind energy
- Improves the local understanding of wind energy
- Provides a bulwark against misunderstandings and
fictional problems with wind energy - Encourages higher interest in Science and Math
- Science/Math activities with larger social
purpose - Students learn about jobs/careers in wind
industry, as well as opportunities for further
training
4Expensive Wind Kits
200 !!
99 ??
800 !!
200 ??
300 Complete Renewable Energy
Set Demonstration little experimental value
5Typical Wind Lessons - Not Technical
- Beaufort Scale
- Pinwheels
- Student Reports
- Demonstrations
- Discussion Activity
- All very interesting but very little of the
science and technology related to the current
wind industry is presented. - In fact most text books are pretty negative about
the future of wind and misrepresent the
technology miserably.
6 This is strange becauseWind Energy is the
Fastest Growing Energy Source in the World!!
US installed capacity grew 45 in 2007 and 50 in
2008!!!
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92008 8,358 megawatts (MW) of new wind energy
capacity installed
- 50 growth rate!
- Brings US total installed wind energy capacity to
25,170 MW - Enough electricity to power the equivalent of
close to 7 million households! - 2009 was a slower year due to the economy
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13Why such growthcosts!
1979 40 cents/kWh
2000 4 - 6 cents/kWh
NSP 107 MW Lake Benton wind farm 4 cents/kWh
(unsubsidized)
- Increased Turbine Size
- RD Advances
- Manufacturing Improvements
2004 3 4.5 cents/kWh
14Other Reason to teach
Elegant Power Source
15Need to Change Perceptions
16Wind Power
- History
- Technology
- The Wind Resource
- Wind in the Classroom
17Early Windmill in Afghanistan (900AD)
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20Jacobs Turbine 1920 - 1960
WinCharger 1930s 40s
21Smith-Putnam Turbine Vermont, 1940's
22Modern Windmills
23Orientation
- Turbines can be categorized into two overarching
classes based on the orientation of the
rotor Vertical Axis Horizontal Axis
24Vertical Axis Turbines
- Advantages
- Omnidirectional
- Accepts wind from any angle
- Components can be mounted at ground level
- Ease of service
- Lighter weight towers
- Can theoretically use less materials to capture
the same amount of wind
- Disadvantages
- Rotors generally near ground where wind poorer
- Centrifugal force stresses blades
- Poor self-starting capabilities
- Requires support at top of turbine rotor
- Requires entire rotor to be removed to replace
bearings - Overall poor performance and reliability
- Have never been commercially successful (large
scale)
25Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines
- Rotors are usually Up-wind of tower
- Some machines have down-wind rotors, but only
commercially available ones are small turbines - Proven, viable technology
26Modern Small Wind TurbinesHigh Tech, High
Reliability, Low Maintenance
- Technically Advanced
- Only 2-3 Moving Parts
- Very Low Maintenance Requirements
- Proven 5,000 On-Grid
- American Companies are the Market and Technology
Leaders
(Not to scale)
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28Over-Speed Protection During High Winds
Upward Furling The rotor tilts back during high
winds
Angle Governor The rotor turns up and to one side
29Yawing 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
30Wacky Designs out there
31Large 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
32Wind Turbine Perspective
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36Maintenance
37Wind Farms
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39Off-Shore Wind Farms
40Middelgrunden
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42Importance of the WIND RESOURCE
43Why do windmills need to be high in the sky??
44Turbulent wind is bad wind
45Calculation of Wind Power
- Power in the wind
- Effect of swept area, A
- Effect of wind speed, V
- Effect of air density, ?
Power in the Wind ½?AV3
R
Swept Area A pR2 Area of the circle swept by
the rotor (m2).
46Importance 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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50Key Issues facing Wind Power
51Wildlife Impacts
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531980s California Wind Farm Older Technology
Higher RPMs Lower Elevations Lattice
Towers Poorly Sited Bad News!
54- In the November-December Audubon Magazine, John
Flicker, President of National Audubon Society,
wrote a column stating that Audubon "strongly
supports wind power as a clean alternative energy
source," pointing to the link between global
warming and the birds and other wildlife that
scientist say it will kill.
55Impacts of Wind PowerNoise
- Modern turbines are relatively quiet
- Rule of thumb stay about 3x hub-height away
from houses
56Transmission Problems
- Where is the wind?
- Where are the population centers?
- Where are the wind farms?
- How do we get wind energy from the wind farms to
the population centers?
57Siting and NIMBY
58Wind Energy in the Classroom
59Standards/Skills
- Scientific Processes (Collecting Presenting
Data, Performing Experiments, Repeating Trials,
Using Models) - Use of Simple Tools Equipment
- Forces Cause Change
- Energy Transformations (Forms of Energy)
- Circuits/Electricity/Magnetism
- Weather Patterns
- Renewable Non Renewable Energy
60Elementary
- Engineering is Elementary
- Wind Chimes
- Wind Art
- Building simple blades
61Middle
- Building Wind Turbines
- Assessing Wind Resource
- Mathematics
balloon
3m
streamers
Kite or balloon string
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63Secondary
- Advanced Blade Design
- School Siting Projects
- Data Analysis
- Advanced Math
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65Math Curriculum
66Circuits, Wind Farms, Battery Charging, and
Hybrid Systems
67Questions???
68The KidWind Project www.kidwind.org