Near-Wake Dynamics of a Vertical-Axis Turbine
Benjamin Strom, Brian Polagye, Steven L. Brunton

TL;DR
This study investigates the unsteady wake dynamics of a vertical-axis turbine using advanced flow visualization and analysis techniques, revealing complex vortex structures and flow behaviors relevant for turbine array optimization.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of optimized dynamic mode decomposition to analyze unsteady wake flow, outperforming traditional methods and providing new insights into vortex shedding mechanisms.
Findings
Identification of vortex streets and their formation mechanisms.
Observation of strong axial flow in vortical structures.
Vortex trajectories show significant variability, complicating downstream flow control.
Abstract
Cross-flow, or vertical-axis, turbines are a promising technology for capturing kinetic energy in wind or flowing water and their inherently unsteady fluid mechanics present unique opportunities for control optimization of individual rotors or arrays. To explore the potential for beneficial interactions between turbines in an array, coherent structures in the wake of a single two-bladed cross-flow turbine are examined using planar stereo particle image velocimetry in a water channel. First, the mean wake structure of this high chord-to-radius ratio rotor is described, compared to previous studies, and a simple explanation for observed wake deflection is presented. Second, the unsteady flow is then analyzed via the triple decomposition, with the periodic component extracted using a combination of traditional techniques and a novel implementation of the optimized dynamic mode…
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