Near-wake structure of full-scale vertical-axis wind turbines
Nathaniel J. Wei, Ian D. Brownstein, Jennifer L. Cardona, Michael F., Howland, John O. Dabiri

TL;DR
This study develops a new 3D flow measurement method to analyze the near-wake of full-scale vertical-axis wind turbines, revealing how blade geometry influences wake structure and recovery, with implications for turbine design and array optimization.
Contribution
A novel volumetric particle-tracking velocimetry technique was created to measure 3D flows around full-scale VAWTs in field conditions, linking blade geometry to wake dynamics.
Findings
Helical blades induce a tilted wake.
Wake tilt is connected to blade geometry.
Insights into wake recovery mechanisms.
Abstract
To design and optimize arrays of vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs) for maximal power density and minimal wake losses, a careful consideration of the inherently three-dimensional structure of the wakes of these turbines in real operating conditions is needed. Accordingly, a new volumetric particle-tracking velocimetry method was developed to measure three-dimensional flow fields around full-scale VAWTs in field conditions. Experiments were conducted at the Field Laboratory for Optimized Wind Energy (FLOWE) in Lancaster, CA, using six cameras and artificial snow as tracer particles. Velocity and vorticity measurements were obtained for a 2-kW turbine with five straight blades and a 1-kW turbine with three helical blades, each at two distinct tip-speed ratios and at Reynolds numbers based on the rotor diameter between and . A tilted wake was…
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