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Museum of Science Wind Turbine Lab Project History and Three-Year Performance Report Boston, MA

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Page 1: Three-Year Performance Report

Museum of Science

Wind Turbine Lab

Project History and

Three-Year Performance Report

Boston, MA

Page 2: Three-Year Performance Report

Why are Wind Turbines

on the Museum of Science Roof?

• Wind energy was one option explored as part of our Green Initiative,

which includes conservation, recycling, and other renewable energy

sources.

• Site, wind and structural assessment showed it was impractical to

scale wind turbines for Museum’s electrical load (9GWh/year)

– No land to install turbines, big or small. Roof is only option here.

• Little data on small-scale wind turbines are available from the built

environment

– “Built environment” includes turbines within influence of human

construction, not just on rooftops or building-integrated

Page 3: Three-Year Performance Report

Goals of the MOS Wind Turbine Lab

• Testing a variety of commercially available small-scale wind turbines roof-mounted in our urban environment

• Serving as a community resource for both professionals and the general public

– A lesson in critical thinking about energy technology

– A practical demonstration and laboratory; experience; data

• An experiential part of a new Museum exhibit

• A landmark for Boston, Cambridge, New England

• A statement about the importance of renewable energy

And it also generates clean energy…

Page 4: Three-Year Performance Report

Three-Year Summary 2010 through 2012

• The wind turbines average 4,229 kWh

clean electricity per year. – 15.6 kW installed, grid-tied

– 55% of average MA home annual electricity

– Museum requires > 1,000 times MA house

– 12.70 MWhr total

– Avoid over 5,100 pounds of carbon dioxide each year

• No issues with noise, vibration, ice throw, flicker, bats, other environment problems; just two bird strikes in 5-year lab history. Our neighbors like them, too.

• Not cost effective at this site – Roof installation costs were high; Complex project

– The Museum does not have a good wind regime

• Average Wind Speeds ~ 3 m/s; Recommended average 5 m/s

Page 5: Three-Year Performance Report

• Project Planning

• Data Analysis

• Turbine Performance

• Lessons Learned

Page 6: Three-Year Performance Report

Complex Site

PUBLIC

SAFETY

STRUCTURE

Page 7: Three-Year Performance Report

But wait, there’s more!

DCR Land

Wetland

FAA / hospital / military flyway Historic District

(MA, Boston & Cambridge)

Birds? Bats?

Endangered species?

Neighbors

Page 8: Three-Year Performance Report

Museum Wind Study

• Multiple locations for measurement

– Parapets

– Tower

• 3-month study correlated local data to Logan to estimate local

annual pattern

• Winds recorded for another 9 months

• Moved anemometer 1 to future Proven location

• Full report available at mos.org/WindTurbineLab

Page 9: Three-Year Performance Report

Turbine Criteria

• Commercially available, residential-scale

• Size & weight appropriate for roof installation

• Responsive in our wind regime

• Within budget

• Variety of designs

– Downwind, upwind, architectural, vertical

• Manufacturer willing to accept the challenge

Page 10: Three-Year Performance Report

Windspire Energy

Windspire 1.2kW @11m/s 10 m tall

Cascade Engineering

Swift 1kW @11m/s 2.1 m diameter

Southwest Windpower

Skystream 3.7 2.4kW @13m/s 3.7 m diameter

Proven Energy

Proven 6 6kW @12m/s 5.5 m diameter

AeroVironment

AVX1000 5 x 1kW @13m/s 1.8 m diameter

The Turbines

Page 11: Three-Year Performance Report

The Exhibit: Catching the Wind

Page 12: Three-Year Performance Report

• Project Planning

• Data Analysis

• Turbine Performance

• Lessons Learned

Page 13: Three-Year Performance Report

Data Collection - Power

Page 14: Three-Year Performance Report

Data Collection - Wind

Page 15: Three-Year Performance Report

MOS Wind Turbine Lab

Data Analysis

• Scatter-plot power vs. wind data compared to

published power curves

• Energy and wind distribution charts

• Comparison metric is Energy / Swept Area

• Ad-hoc analyses

Page 16: Three-Year Performance Report

• The Museum samples data every 2-3

seconds, after inverters, transformer.

– Wind Direction

– Power & Energy for each turbine

– Wind Speed for each turbine’s

anemometer

• Data aggregated into 10-minute intervals, includes wind speed and power

averages, min, max, std dev.

• We create scatter plots of 10-minute average power vs. 10-minute average

wind speed; compare to manufacturer’s graphs.

Understanding Power Curves -

MOS Data

Page 17: Three-Year Performance Report

Understanding Power Curves -

Rated Power, Rated Speed

Ve

rtic

al a

xis

is

kW

Power Wind Speed

AVX1000 1 kW @ 13m/s

Proven 6 6 kW @ 12m/s

Skystream 3.7 2.4 kW @ 13m/s

Swift 1kW @ 11m/s

Windspire Standard

1.2 kW @ 11m/s

Windspire Extreme Wind

1.2 kW @ 13m/s

• Power Curves are graphs that plot the power a turbine generates at different

wind speeds. Defines expected performance, but not energy in local wind

regime.

• Wind Speed for “Rated Power” is not yet standardized across market,

complicating comparisons. • Example: Note difference below

between power at 12 m/s and 11 m/s.

Page 18: Three-Year Performance Report

Understanding Energy

• Power is proportional to wind speed cubed and swept area: ½ρAV3

– “Rated Power” tells you about size of generator and rotor, not how much energy you can expect.

• Energy = Power * Time – Energy depends most strongly on wind speed and duration

• How fast, how long, how often

– Energy is what the end user cares about

• Wind at MOS rarely reaches the speeds at which our turbines are rated (11-13m/s)

– Beaufort Wind Scale Number 6: “Strong Breeze”

• 25 – 31 mph (11–14 m/s)

• Large branches move; river is choppy; umbrella use is difficult

– Less than 1% of wind here over 20 mph, likely typical of populated areas

• MOS turbines do produce over 4.2MWh per year – MOS WTL mean wind speeds: 6.2 – 8.3 mph (2.8 – 3.7 m/s)

– Recommended average wind speed 11 mph (5 m/s)

Page 19: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 20: Three-Year Performance Report

“High wind” distribution

(dark blue, right)

better correlates with

energy generation

(above)

than using average

wind speeds (below).

Page 21: Three-Year Performance Report

Wind Direction

Page 22: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 23: Three-Year Performance Report

• Project Planning

• Data Analysis

• Turbine Performance

• Lessons Learned

Page 24: Three-Year Performance Report

Skystream 3.7

Horizontal axis, Downwind ; Passive yaw

3.7-meter rotor; 10-meter tower

Closest to “plug and play” for 3.5 years. Out of service Oct 2012 thru Dec 2012.

16.5% of average MA home’s electricity.

10

hours Run plasma TV 10 hours a day.

Page 25: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 26: Three-Year Performance Report

Proven 6

Horizontal axis; Downwind; 5.5-meter rotor; 9-meter tower

Largest generator and rotor of the Museum turbines.

Produces the most energy but underperforms at higher winds. speeds.

Wiring adjustment August 2012

28.7% of average MA home’s electricity. 18

hours Run plasma TV 18 hours a day.

Page 27: Three-Year Performance Report

Proven Power Curves

Page 28: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 29: Three-Year Performance Report

4

hours

AVX1000 (5 Units)

Horizontal axis; Upwind; 1.8-meter rotor.

These turbines act independently,

but we add their power together.

Hardware and inverter problems repaired;

Improved, still underperforming.

6.8% average MA home’s electricity.

Run plasma TV 4 hours a day.

Page 30: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 31: Three-Year Performance Report

Swift

Horizontal axis; Upwind; 2-meter rotor

The computer model picture below shows

how wind from the river slows down when

it gets to the Swift (at the small blue swirl

on the roof).

1.2% average MA home’s electricity.

Run plasma TV less than an hour a day. < 1

hour

TRC/Ansys Computational Flow Model

Page 32: Three-Year Performance Report

Swift: Investigating Power Curve’s Lower Limb

N

NNE

NE

ENE

E

ESE

SE

SSE

S

SSW

SW

WSW

W

WNW

NW

NNW

Why do some high-wind records yield very low power?

- CFD model and observation indicates in SW wind Swift often

yaws without spinning.

- Can anemometer (2 inch diameter) measure high winds in

eddy that Swift (2 meter diameter) cannot utilize?

- Are effects seasonal? Directional? Vary by wind bin?

• At wind speeds over 6 m/s, 82% of the data records follow

the power curve.

• Roof drag and structural obstacles may impede Swift’s

operation, but most of the data does follow the power curve,

performing to spec.

Page 33: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 34: Three-Year Performance Report

Windspire Standard Model

1Jan2010 – 30Jun2011

Vertical-axis; 6-meter tall rotor

Cut-out logic reduced access

to high energy wind, but

standard model tracks power

curve well to 8 m/s.

Due to inverter issues,

Windspire shut down Jan, Feb,

most of Aug, half of Sep, end

of Dec.

Nearby chiller fan may affect

turbine or anemometer during

summer months.

Page 35: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 36: Three-Year Performance Report

Windspire Extreme Wind Model

Vertical-axis; 4-meter tall rotor.

1.6% average MA home’s electricity.

Run plasma TV one hour a day.

1

hour

Windspire Extreme Wind

model replaced Standard

model July 11, 2011 - Designed to cut-out at higher

wind speed (40mph) and

recover much faster.

- Reduction in swept area shifts

power curve to the right.

- Tracks power curve well,

except:

Depressed power curve reliably

occurs during hot weather months.

Specific causes unclear.

Page 37: Three-Year Performance Report
Page 38: Three-Year Performance Report

Windspire Power Curve Comparison

Standard and Extreme Wind Models

Page 39: Three-Year Performance Report

Swift

Skystream 3.7

AVX1000

How to Compare? Energy / Swept Area

Proven 6

Windspire

SWEPT

AREA

Page 40: Three-Year Performance Report

Comparing Different Wind Turbines (2010 – 2012 data, except where noted)

TURBINE Annual

Energy/

Swept

Area

(kWh/m2)

Avg

Wind

Speed

(m/s)

Rated

Power

(kW)

Energy/Year

(kWh) MA Home

(EIA avg 2010,2011)

Notes

Skystream

118 2.9 2.4 1278 16.5% Performing as expected here.

Out of service Oct2012 thru

Dec2012.

Proven 93 2.8 6.0 2218 28.7% Generally performs well; Power

plateaus early.

Improved after rewiring

Aug2012.

AVX1000 (5 units)

40 3.7 5.0 525 6.8% Highly directional. Improved

after 2010 repairs, but still

underperforming.

Swift 25 2.8 1.0 90 1.2% Some issues with siting; data

tracks power curve most of the

time.

Extreme Wind

Windspire (11Jul2011-31Dec2012)

25 2.9 1.2 123 1.6% Replaced Standard model

11Jul11. Performing as

expected here. Seasonal site

issues.

Standard

Windspire (2010 only)

24 3.1 1.2 176 2.2% Out of service 4 months of 12.

Seasonal site issues. Shut

down Dec2010.

Page 41: Three-Year Performance Report

Performance over Time

Page 42: Three-Year Performance Report

• Project Planning

• Data Analysis

• Turbine Performance

• Lessons Learned

Page 43: Three-Year Performance Report

MOS Lessons Learned

• Successful experiment! – Generates 4.2 MW-hr clean electricity, avoids 5,100 lbs carbon dioxide annually

– Attractive addition to Museum; Draws interest on renewable energy

– Have provided detailed data and project information to over 1,300 people:

industry professionals, universities, government and the general public,

plus all visitors interacting with the Catching the Wind exhibit

• Be clear on project goals. – Energy? Education? Economics?

– Seek stakeholder buy-in early and often.

• Measure wind profile as close to hub height as practical. – Understand how much energy you can expect in your wind regime.

• Installation sites needed to be a compromise here. – Building roof structure, permitting, and wind rarely converged

– Roof mounting some of these turbines expensive compared to ground installation.

Page 44: Three-Year Performance Report

The Team Museum of Science

David Rabkin, Director for Current Science and Technology

Paul Ippolito, Director, Facilities

Steve Nichols, Project Manager, IIT

Marian Tomusiak, Wind Turbine Lab Analyst

Boreal Renewable Energy Development

Bob Shatten, Principal

Tom Michelman, Principal

Alex Weck, Principal

Michael Alexis, Principal

ANSYS/TRC

Valerio Viti, Sr. Fluids Specialist

Chris DesAutels, Sr. Meteorologist

Lloyd Schulman, Sr. Meteorologist

Apterra Technologies

Ted Schwartz, Principal

Nexamp, Inc.

Will Thompson, VP, Integration

Phelan Engineering

Paul Phelan, Jr., P.E.

Richard Gross, Inc.

Richard Gross, P.E.

Rubin and Rudman, LLP

Keren Schlomy, Partner

Shaw Welding Company

Rick Shaw, President/CEO

Titan Electric Corporation

John Gill, President

Renewable Energy Trust / Mass CEC

Dick Tinsman, now with Criterium Engineers

[email protected]

Rapheal Herz, now with Johnson Controls

[email protected]

Jim Christo, now with Alteris Renewables

[email protected]

Marybeth Campbell, now with the Massachusetts

Clean Energy Center

[email protected]

Christie Howe, Massachusetts Clean Energy Center

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

Underwriters

Kresge Foundation

Cascade Energy

Museum of Science and its supporters

And the Extended Project Team

Page 45: Three-Year Performance Report

View from Museum of Science Garage Roof

One Science Park, Boston MA August 2011

Marian Tomusiak

Wind Turbine Lab Analyst

[email protected]

David Rabkin

Farinon Director,

Current Science and Technology

[email protected]

mos.org/WindTurbineLab

mos.org/Energized

September 2014