On the Wind Energy Resource above High-Rise Buildings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The understanding of the turbulent flow around buildings;
- The aerodynamic response of wind turbines under turbulent flow structures;
- The enhancement of wind energy harvesting through the shape of buildings;
- The social acceptance issues, including aesthetics, noise, maintenance costs and other non-technical issues.
2. Experimental Setup
2.1. Wind Tunnel Tests
2.2. High-Rise Building Model
2.3. Velocity Profile
3. Wind Energy Resource
3.1. Flow Pattern
3.2. Mean Wind Speed
3.2.1. Windward and Leeward Corners
3.2.2. Centre, Windward, and Leeward Edges
3.3. Skew Angle
3.3.1. Windward and Leeward Corners
3.3.2. Centre, Windward, and Leeward Edges
3.4. Turbulence Intensity
3.4.1. Windward and Leeward Corners
3.4.2. Centre, Windward, and Leeward Edges
3.5. Integral Length Scale
3.5.1. Windward and Leeward Corners
3.5.2. Centre, Windward, and Leeward Edges
3.6. Energy Spectra
4. Probability Distribution Function
Quadrant Analysis
5. Wind Energy Density
6. Conclusions
- A region close to the roof surface z/D = 0.1 where turbulence is exclusively affected by the building itself. In this region, the wind speed is relatively low in magnitude and dominated by separated flow, while the turbulence intensity is at its highest (>20–30%). The integral length scale is also smaller than the characteristic size of the high-rise building, with increased isotropy. In this region, the experimental results from hotwire anemometry might be misleading due to the insensitiveness to reversed flow conditions which characterises the flow field. Weibull parameters in this region diverge from those found in the atmospheric wind profile.
- A region of highly sheared flow at z/D~0.3–0.4. The position and extent of this region varies with the wind direction and configuration of the building. The velocity is weakly accelerated and combined with relatively low turbulence intensity Iu~15%. The Weibull distribution is analogous to the atmospheric flow with a shape factor k~8–9.
- A region of accelerated flow, which is highly influenced by the atmospheric wind profile at z/D~0.45. Both mean wind speed and turbulence are analogous to the inflow, U~Uref and Iu~12%, having integral and microscales comparable to atmospheric boundary layer values.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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α = | Wind Energy Resource | |
---|---|---|
at z = 3 m | at z = 12–18 m | |
0° | Wind power energy strongly penalised due to α with generally P < 0.5Pref for #1. Clustering and docked roof shape improve P. Flow is weakly skewed at corners, and edges with θ~0°, while the docked roof is affected by inclination of decks θ~10°. Iu~40–50%, improving with clustering ~30% and docked shape ~20%. | Centre location increase in power up to P~2.5Pref at z = 12 m (~2Pref at 18 m). Clustering reduces P~Pref. Turbulence Iu~17% at centre and lower at perimeter. Iu~20% for #2. Skew angle highest ~15 ° at corners for #1, and θ~0° for #2. Docked shape reduces θ at edges. |
15° | Wind power increases at windward corners, while Iu decreases. Clustering doubles available P. Skew angle analogous to 0°. Turbulence enhanced Iu~50% at leeward corners and reduced at windward corners ~30%. Clustering improves Iu and θ. | Power reduced slightly for #1 and increases for #2, compared to 0 °. Turbulence Iu~15% in both #1 and #2. Highest skew angle of dataset for corners and edges θ > 15°. Clustering reduces θ. |
30° | Power increases to P~1.5Pref with lower turbulence Iu < 30% at centre and corners. Skew angle slightly decrease θ~−5° at corners and centre. #2 analogous to #1 in terms of power and turbulence, with a lower skew angles θ~7°. | Power reduced to ~1.7Pref, and to ~Pref when clustering. Iu~Iref For #1 at corners θ~0°, at edges θ~10°, and #2 is analogous. |
45° | Similar conclusions as to α = 30° in terms of power and skew angle. Clustering increases turbulence on edges. Docked shape reduces turbulence to Iu~Iref. | Power lowest ~1.5Pref for isolated #1, while P > 2Pref for #2. Iu~Iref Clustering increases θ at all positions. At corners θ~0 °, at edges θ~10°. |
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Vita, G.; Šarkić-Glumac, A.; Hemida, H.; Salvadori, S.; Baniotopoulos, C. On the Wind Energy Resource above High-Rise Buildings. Energies 2020, 13, 3641. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13143641
Vita G, Šarkić-Glumac A, Hemida H, Salvadori S, Baniotopoulos C. On the Wind Energy Resource above High-Rise Buildings. Energies. 2020; 13(14):3641. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13143641
Chicago/Turabian StyleVita, Giulio, Anina Šarkić-Glumac, Hassan Hemida, Simone Salvadori, and Charalampos Baniotopoulos. 2020. "On the Wind Energy Resource above High-Rise Buildings" Energies 13, no. 14: 3641. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13143641
APA StyleVita, G., Šarkić-Glumac, A., Hemida, H., Salvadori, S., & Baniotopoulos, C. (2020). On the Wind Energy Resource above High-Rise Buildings. Energies, 13(14), 3641. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13143641