No more windmills: Wind catchers use Venturi technique to generate power

Feb. 23, 2013
Using principles analogous to those of hydroelectric dams, wind catchers from SheerWind could generate power much less expensively than conventional wind turbines.

Many inventors have questioned the logic of harnessing wind power by situating heavy gearboxes, generators, and rotor blades hundreds of feet in the air, as is the case for conventional horizontal wind turbines. One alternative design that does away with all these entities looks as though it is getting traction from both investors and a few potential customers.

SheerWind in Chaska, Minn., has fielded a wind power idea based on the Venturi effect. Basically it collects wind and compresses it in a funnel-like chamber before sending it to turn the blades of a generator. The generator sits on the ground rather than at the top of a tower. The brain child of Dr.  Daryoush Allaei, a mechanical engineer, the wind catcher is called the Invelox. A 90-foot-tall version of the device, says Allaei, could create the same amount of power as a 1.8-MW commercial wind tower. But it would be a third of the height, sit on a seventh of the land, and use turbine blades eight times smaller in diameter than what you'd find on a utility scale turbine. Allaei also claims the electricity would be at least 40% cheaper to produce.

Visible in these images of the Invelox are the input baffles (top) and generator (bottom).One benefit of Allaei's design is that it will work with breezes of only two miles per hour, compared to the 8 mph or more it takes to start a conventional turbine. The operating is similar to that of hydroelectric dams, Allaei points out, but with water  replaced by air. Another benefit is that the materials used to funnel and concentrate the air can be inexpensive. One of Allaei's ideas is to produce a collapsible aluminum-and-fabric version that could be air-dropped and assembled at military outposts or in disaster areas. Invelox wind catchers could also be built as part of commercial buildings, with ducts installed the same way as HVAC ducting is now, he says.

The city of Royalton, Minn., is said to be evaluating the Invelox design for possible installation there.

 Operating principles of the Invelox.All in all, Allaei figures the design can generate power at a cost of 2.8 to 4.1¢/kWh, competitive even with natural gas. The company has spent the past year validating the design by such means as using conservation of mass, conservation of energy, and Bernoulli equations applicable to pipe carrying flow. They've also produced full scale computational fluid dynamic (CFD) models of the design that were used to investigate and develop design trade secrets to  design and produce demonstration units.

Allaei's wind catcher concept as he described it in one of his patents.The first small scale field unit, rated 300 mW was designed and constructed last year and validated the CFD models predictions. A larger scale field demo unit rated 1.5 kW to 5 kW also went live last year.

About the Author

Leland Teschler

Lee Teschler served as Editor-in-Chief of Machine Design until 2014. He holds a B.S. Engineering from the University of Michigan; a B.S. Electrical Engineering from the University of Michigan; and an MBA from Cleveland State University. Prior to joining Penton, Lee worked as a Communications design engineer for the U.S. Government.

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