1. Introduction
For the type of wind turbine [
1], wind turbines are classified by the difference in fluid force acting on the wind turbine blade into lift-type wind turbines and drag-type wind turbines. The propeller-type wind turbines, which can be seen everywhere, are representative of lift-type wind turbines. Other lift-type wind turbines include the Darrieus wind turbine. On the other hand, Savonius wind turbines and the cross-flow wind turbines are representative of drag-type wind turbines. Furthermore, wind turbines can also be classified by the relationship between the direction of wind and the direction of rotor axis into horizontal-axis wind turbine (HAWTs) and vertical-axis wind turbine (VAWTs). The propeller-type wind turbine is a kind of HAWT and Darrieus wind turbine, and the Savonius wind turbine and cross-flow wind turbine are classified into VAWT. Lift-type wind turbines have the advantages of high rotating speed and high output so these are widely used, while drag-type wind turbines have not been widely used because of the disadvantages of low speed and low output. However, VAWTs such as the Savonius wind turbine and the cross-flow wind turbine do not require yaw control, and therefore have a simple structure and are less affected by changes in wind direction.
In addition, the usage of wind turbines for power generation began in Denmark. In the 1890s, Poul La Cour incorporated aerodynamic design principles in the blade design of the wind turbine [
2]. For a while after that, wind power generation was far from being a successful business. After the oil crisis of the 1970s, the development and introduction of wind turbines were vigorously promoted mainly in Europe and United States. Now, the movement toward decarbonization due to global warming is accelerating the use of wind energy.
Despite such circumstances, Japan is an island nation with many mountainous regions, so the land areas where large-scale wind power generation is feasible are limited in Japan. Therefore, offshore wind power generation is expected as a promising technology, and various studies are being conducted to introduce it [
3]. In addition, the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy has proposed a vigorous and strategic target for the introduction of the wind power generation of 30% of the total domestic power generation capacity requiring approximately 130 GW of the installed capacity [
4]. In order to achieve the goal, the spread of medium- and small-scale wind power generation is also needed. In particular, medium- and small-scale wind power generation is expected to be used in urban and mountain areas where wind conditions, such as wind direction and speed, are highly variable, so it is expected that not only horizontal propeller-type wind turbines but also vertical Darrius, Savonius, and the cross-flow wind turbine will be used. However, as mentioned above, Savonius and the cross-flow wind turbine have a disadvantage of low power output in spite of the advantage of low starting torque, so the output performance of these wind turbines needs to be improved. For these reasons, we began our study on the output performance improvement for the cross-flow wind turbines.
As shown in
Figure 1 and
Figure 2, a cross-flow wind turbine consists of many small blades which are arranged in a circle, and the structure is simple. In Japan, relatively many studies on the cross-flow wind turbine have been conducted. Ushiyama et al. [
5] and Tan et al. [
6] studied the relations between the design factors, such as the number of blades and blade pitch angle, and the wind turbine performance. Additionally, we conducted similar studies using a cross-flow wind turbine with a diameter of 114 mm; as a result, it was shown that the optimal solidity and blade pitch angle are
σ = 0.76 and
β = 45°, respectively [
7]. Moreover, we studied upscaling of cross-flow wind turbines using scale-up models with a 1.5 times larger diameter [
8]. Two types of the cross-flow wind turbine of which the solidity and the blade pitch angle were same but the size of the blade airfoil and the number of blades were different were investigated, and it was confirmed that the output performance characteristics of three types of cross-flow wind turbines including the wind turbine with a diameter of 114 mm were almost equivalent. In any case, all of the studies for cross-flow wind turbines described here [
5,
6,
7,
8] have shown that the maximum power coefficient is as low as about 0.1, and these results indicate the necessity to devise some way to achieve higher output performance.
Cross-flow wind turbines have a characteristic that the wind turbine can rotate by the wind from any direction. The half swept area catching the wind is useful to rotate the wind turbine itself, but for the rest half swept area, the entering flow into the area prevents from the rotor rotation. Therefore, the key to improving output performance is to prevent undesirable wind from entering the rotor and to allow some of the prevented wind to enter the effective half swept area. With this in mind, we studied a more effective use of cross-flow wind turbines, which are expected to be used for small-scale wind power generation, by improving the output performance of cross-flow wind turbines. In other words, we studied methods of improving the flow of cross-flow wind turbines to achieve high output, for example, a method of using the flow at the edge of a structure such as a building, a method of using a wind-collecting device as a casing composed of two deflector plates, and so on. For the effective use of cross-flow wind turbines, not only us but also various unique studies have been conducted on suitable installation locations for cross-flow wind turbines and additional devices that improve the ambient wind flow suitable for cross-flow wind turbines. These studies have focused on improving the output performance of the cross-flow wind turbine because of its low output performance. Shimizu et al. developed a ring diffuser with guide vanes for higher performance of a cross-flow wind turbine [
9]. The ring diffuser consisted of multiple guide vanes, and these guide vanes were arranged radially and with an inclination angle, which guided the entering wind flow to the rotor favorably around the wind turbine rotor. They showed that the ring diffuser with a diameter of 1150 mm, 18 vanes, and vane inclination angles of 30° to 60° was applied to a cross-flow wind turbine with a diameter of 350 mm and an axial length of 360 mm, and the ring diffuser could improve the output performance of the cross-flow wind turbine by about 1.5 to 2 times. Kiwata et al. studied a cross-flow wind turbine installed at the top of a windbreak fence [
10]. In their research, a cross-flow wind turbine with a diameter of 80 mm installed above a windbreak fence having a height of 500 mm and a geometric shielding rate of 60% and 100% was examined, and the relations among the output performance of the cross-flow wind turbine and the rotating direction of the rotor, the clearance between the rotor and the top edge of the fence, and the geometric shielding rate were investigated. In the case of the geometric shielding rate of 100%, the flow above the fence was clearly increased so the maximum power coefficient reached about 0.6, whereas when the wind turbine was located above the fence having a geometric shielding rate of 60%, the increase in the flow above the fence decreased and the maximum power coefficient was reduced to about 0.3. However, it was still higher than that of the bare cross-flow wind turbine. Their results indicated that installing cross-flow wind turbines above the windbreak fence is one of the effective uses of cross-flow wind turbines. Mohamed et al. proposed the wind concentrator for cross-flow wind turbines to improve the output performance [
11]. The wind concentrator consists of an arc-shaped windshield device and a wind augmentation device, which is a type of wind lens [
12] as mentioned later. As mentioned above, cross-flow wind turbines have an undesirable swept area where the blades are moving in the upstream direction, and the wind flow entering this area prevents the rotor rotation. The arc-shaped windshield device was used to block this undesirable flow. In addition, the wind augmentation device was used to increase the flow rate by the wind-lens effect. In their research, using a cross-flow wind turbine with a diameter of 80 mm, an arc-shaped windshield device of an inner radius of 43.5 mm which covered 1/4 of the rotor where the blades were moving to the upstream side and a wind augmentation device of a wind lens type which was two parallel plates with flanges having a height of 50 mm and covered the rear side of the rotor were added as a wind concentrator to the cross-flow wind turbine. As a result, it was shown that the addition of the wind augmentation device to the arc-shaped windshield device could improve the power coefficient of the wind turbine by 88% and more, and the maximum power coefficient became higher by about 108%. Shigemitsu et al. focused on the two-directional prevailing winds generated by the land breeze and the sea breeze such as in coastal areas and investigated the use of cross-flow wind turbines in a prevailing wind environment. In order to improve the performance of cross-flow wind turbines, symmetrical casings combining a nozzle and a diffuser with the same shape, which could use the prevailing winds effectively, have been proposed [
13,
14]. A nozzle was arranged on the side where the blades were rotating along with the direction of the wind to make a flow path like a spiral casing, and a diffuser, the shape of which is the same as the nozzle, was arranged symmetrically to the nozzle, making an outlet flow path. The symmetrical casing with the nozzle and the diffuser was applied to a cross-flow wind turbine with a diameter of 150 mm, and the relations between the performance of the cross-flow wind turbine and the inclination angles of the casing against the wind flow direction were investigated. They showed that the symmetrical casing with an inclination angle of 15° could improve the performance of the wind turbine by 70% in the power coefficient. In addition, the effect of adding the side boards, which were standing perpendicular to the wind direction, on the nozzle and the diffuser was also examined. It was shown that the performance of the wind turbine became higher by about 1.9 times compared with the bare wind turbine when the side board was placed on the most upstream side of the nozzle (another side board was placed on the most downstream side of the diffuser) and the inclination angle of the casing was 30°.
In the studies [
9,
10,
11,
13,
14] mentioned above, a device to improve the inflow of the cross-flow wind turbine has been added to the turbine rotor to increase the power output of the wind turbine. Similar to these studies, our study aimed to achieve higher power output by improving the flow into the cross-flow turbine rotor by the addition of surrounding structures. The wind-collecting casing studied in this study is a device that covers the rotor of a cross-flow wind turbine and here is called a wind-collecting casing (simply called a casing).
Figure 1 shows the schematic of a cross-flow wind turbine with a wind-collecting casing that was studied [
8] and the flow of the cross-flow wind turbine with the casing. The casing consists of several flow deflector plates (hereinafter a “flow deflector”) and a tail blade [
15]. In
Figure 1, the casing has two flow deflectors with the shape of a circular-arc airfoil. One of the flow deflectors is located very close to the top of the rotor with a negative angle of attack with respect to the direction of the incoming wind (called FD-A), and the other is located upstream of the lower half of the rotor in the figure (called FD-B). These flow deflectors of FD-A and FD-B have different effects on flow improvement, and the combination of these flow deflectors is a feature of the proposed wind-collecting casing. In addition, compared to the ring diffuser introduced above by Shimizu et al. [
9], the additional structure composed of two flow deflectors is smaller than that of the ring diffuser. This contributes to reducing the upstream flow velocity reduction and can make the structure of the casing simple.
According to the study of a wind turbine with a shroud, which has a diffuser shape, by Ohya et al. [
12], when a diffuser was set in a uniform flow, the flow speed at the inlet of the diffuser was increased compared with that of the ambient wind. Moreover, by adding a brim (flange) to the diffuser at the rear edge of the diffuser, the flow-accelerating effect was enhanced extremely. In their research, using a propeller-type wind turbine with a diameter
D = 720 mm, the optimal form of the flanged diffuser (called a wind lens) with an axial length of 1.25
D was examined. From the results, a flanged diffuser with an axial length of 1.25
D, a diffuser opening angle of 12°, and a flange height of 0.5
D were applied to the wind turbine, and the output performance of the wind turbine increased by about 4 to 5 times compared to that of the bare wind turbine. Furthermore, Ohya et al. also examined the compact type of the flanged diffuser [
16]. Even with a compacted flanged diffuser with an axial length of 0.22
D and a flange height of 0.1
D, the output performance of the wind turbine could be increased by about 2.5 times, and the wind turbine with the compacted flanged diffuser was proposed as a more practical one. In addition, in the continuous study of the wind turbine with the compact flanged diffuser shortened in the axial direction by Oka et al. [
17], it was shown that the accelerated flow caused by the flanged diffuser was particularly strong near the inner surface of the flanged diffuser from the results of the numerical study. Based on the results of these studies, the position of the flow deflector of FD-A was determined to obtain an accelerated flow to the rotor of a cross-flow wind turbine. This accelerated flow assists the rotor to rotate in the vicinity of the flow deflector of FD-A.
In addition, considering the flow of a cross-flow wind turbine without a wind-collecting casing based on
Figure 1, the blades on the upper side of the rotor in the figure move in the direction of the wind flow into the rotor. On the other hand, the blades on the lower side of the rotor move in the opposite direction of the wind direction. Therefore, the flow into the lower half of the rotor is undesirable for the wind turbine. In our previous study of a cross-flow wind turbine using the separation flow near the edge of a structure such as a building [
18], the power output of a cross-flow wind turbine was obviously improved by arranging the position of the rotor to be near the edge of a structure where the flow separation generated, and only the blades moving in the upwind direction in the half swept area of the rotor were in the separation zone. Based on these results, we considered the arrangement of the flow deflectors of FD-B so that the lower half of the rotor in
Figure 1 was in the dead air region. The flow deflectors of FD-B are for blocking the inflow of wind into the lower half of the rotor and reducing the aerodynamic resistance to the blade moving upstream.
As shown in the lower right of
Figure 1, the actual wind-collecting casing added to the cross-flow rotor proposed by us is a type of casing consisting of multiple flow deflectors and a tail blade. This casing was fixed to the rotating shaft of the wind turbine by bearings above and below the rotor. As mentioned above, the structure was designed to improve the flow suitable for a cross-flow rotor by flow deflectors to increase the power output of the wind turbine and to maintain the improved flow condition for the wind turbine in any wind direction by a tail blade to change the orientation of the casing only in response to changes in wind direction. In the previous study of high power output by utilizing the separation flow at the edge of a building or other structure, the wind direction was limited to one direction, but the introduction of the tail blade solved the problem of wind direction limitation. With the aim of further improving the casing, in this study, we examined the possibility of increasing the power output of a cross-flow wind turbine by using a wind-collecting casing with three flow deflectors. This casing is an improvement over the previous casing with two flow deflectors as shown in
Figure 1. As mentioned above, the flow deflectors rotate with the tail blade so that the casing faces the wind in the correct direction even when the wind direction changes. However, when the wind direction changes rapidly, there is likely to be a misalignment between the wind direction and the orientation of the casing, and the misalignment causes a reduction in the effect of output performance improvement. The reduction in output performance increases as the width of the flow deflector shortens [
19,
20]. Therefore, to maintain a high output performance improvement effect even when the wind direction changes, the number of flow deflectors was increased in this casing.
In this study, a test model of cross-flow wind turbine with a casing composed of three flow deflectors was created by using a 3D printer and using a wind tunnel, the output performance tests were conducted by changing the casing orientation with respect to the wind direction in several ways. In addition, numerical fluid analyses using OpenFOAM were conducted under the same conditions as the output performance test. The obtained results are discussed in terms of the effectiveness of the proposed casing in improving output performance and also its superiority over the casing with two flow deflectors in our previous study against changes in wind direction.