Scientific News Power engineering Commutator STABLE POWER SUPPLY THANKS TO WIND TURBINES
STABLE POWER
SUPPLY THANKS TO WIND TURBINES
Wind turbines can help keep the voltage in the
electricity network at a constant level. The power electronics in the turbines
can effectively correct peaks and dips in the mains voltage. This is the
conclusion reached by NWO-funded researchers.
Modern wind turbines are a good means of coping
with fluctuations in the mains voltage. Such fluctuations occur when the demand
for energy increases suddenly (for example when a factory turns on heavy
machinery) or the supply decreases (for example if a nearby power station
suddenly goes off line).
The electrical engineers at Delft University of
Technology base their conclusion on a model which they developed to study
fluctuations in the electricity network on a time scale running from seconds to
minutes. At the moment, the task of maintaining the stability of the mains
voltage is left entirely to power stations. In future, sustainable energy will
become more important. Wind turbines and other sustainable energy sources will
then need to help stabilise the mains voltage.
A large number of modern wind turbines are
equipped with a power electronics converter that ensures that they produce the
same voltage at all times, regardless of the rotor speed. Minor alterations to
the power electronics and the controller can also ensure that the mains voltage
is adjusted. The electronic system makes clever use of the properties of
alternating current. In alternating current, the voltage crosses zero a hundred
times a second. By sending electricity into the network at that moment, the
power electronics can boost the voltage. Strangely enough, this does not need to
cost much energy. ‘Reactive power compensation’, to give it its proper
technical name, even works when there is no wind and the rotor blades are not
rotating. In that case, the power electronics can extract the necessary energy
from the network, precisely between two zero-axis crossings.
Not all types of wind turbine can help stabilise
the mains voltage. One type is not equipped with the power electronics converter
which is necessary. The principle behind this type of turbine is that the
rotational speed of the rotor is constant and independent of the wind speed.
The NWO research
team intend extending their model of fluctuations in the electricity network so
as to have it model the influence of other sustainable energy sources, such as
solar cells. The energy sector will be able to use the model to calculate what
the maximum contribution of various sustainable energy sources can be without
endangering the stability of the power supply. The model can also indicate what
additional technology is necessary to ensure stability.
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Contact:
Michel Philippens; philippens@nwo.nl;
31-70-344 0784; Netherlands Organization for
Scientific Research
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research
Publishing date: October 16, 2001
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