Betz Law

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Betz' law

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Schematic of fluid flow through a disk-shaped actuator. Betz's law is a theory about the maximum possible energy to be derived from a "hydraulic wind engine", or a wind turbine such as the olienne Bolle (patented in 1868), the Eclipse Windmill (developed in 1867), and the Aermotor (first appeared in 1888 to pump water for cattle, and is still in production). Decades before the advent of the modern 3-blade wind turbine that generates electricity, Betz's law was developed in 1919 by the German physicist Albert Betz.[1] According to Betz's law, no turbine can capture more than 59.3 percent of the kinetic energy in wind. The ideal or maximum theoretical efficiency n max (also called power coefficient) of a wind turbine is the ratio of maximum power obtained from the wind to the total power available in the wind. The factor 0.593 is known as Betz's coefficient (from the name of the man who first derived it). It is the maximum fraction of the power in a wind stream that can be extracted. power coefficient = Cp =( power output from wind machine) / (power available in wind )

Contents
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1 Three independent discoveries of the turbine efficiency limit 2 Economic relevance 3 Proof o 3.1 Assumptions o 3.2 Application of conservation of mass (continuity equation) o 3.3 Power and work 4 Betz' law and coefficient of performance 5 Points of interest 6 Modern development 7 References

[edit] Three independent discoveries of the turbine efficiency limit


The British scientist Lanchester derived the same maximum already in 1915. The leader of the Russian aerodynamic school, Zhukowsky, also published the same result for an ideal wind turbine in 1920, the same year as Betz did.[2] It is thus an example of Stigler's Law.

[edit] Economic relevance


Because some modern wind turbines approach this potential maximum efficiency, once practical engineering obstacles are considered, Betz' Law shows a limiting factor for this form of renewable energy. Engineering constraints, energy storage and transmission losses and other factors mean that even the best modern turbines may operate at efficiencies substantially below the Betz Limit.

[edit] Proof
It shows the maximum possible energy known as the Betz limit that may be derived by means of an infinitely thin rotor from a fluid flowing at a certain speed. In order to calculate the maximum theoretical efficiency of a thin rotor (of, for example, a windmill) one imagines it to be replaced by a disc that withdraws energy from the fluid passing through it. At a certain distance behind this disc the fluid that has passed through flows with a reduced velocity.

[edit] Assumptions
1. The rotor does not possess a hub, this is an ideal rotor, with an infinite number of blades which have no drag. Any resulting drag would only lower this idealized value. 2. The flow into and out of the rotor is axial. This is a control volume analysis, and to construct a solution the control volume must contain all flow going in and out, failure to account for that flow would violate the conservation equations. 3. This is incompressible flow. The density remains constant, and there is no heat transfer from the rotor to the flow or vice versa. 4. The rotor is also massless. No account is taken of angular momentum imparted to either the rotor or the air flow behind the rotor, i.e., no account is taken of any wake effect..

[edit] Application of conservation of mass (continuity equation)

Applying conservation of mass to this control volume, the mass flow rate (the mass of fluid flowing per unit time) is given by:

where v1 is the speed in the front of the rotor and v2 is the speed downstream of the rotor, and v is the speed at the fluid power device. is the fluid density, and the area of the turbine is given by S. The force exerted on the wind by the rotor may be written as

[edit] Power and work


The work done by the force may be written incrementally as

and the power (rate of work done) of the wind is

Now substituting the force F computed above into the power equation will yield the power extracted from the wind:

However, power can be computed another way, by using the kinetic energy. Applying the conservation of energy equation to the control volume yields

Looking back at the continuity equation, a substitution for the mass flow rate yields the following

Both of these expressions for power are completely valid, one was derived by examining the incremental work done and the other by the conservation of energy. Equating these two expressions yields

Examining the two equated expressions yields an interesting result, mainly

or

Therefore, the wind velocity at the rotor may be taken as the average of the upstream and downstream velocities. This is often the most argued against portion of Betz' law, but as it can be seen from the above derivation, it is indeed correct.

[edit] Betz' law and coefficient of performance


Returning to the previous expression for power based on kinetic energy:

The horizontal axis reflects the ratio v2/v1, the vertical axis is the "power coefficient [1]" Cp.

By differentiating (through careful application of the chain rule) with respect to for a given fluid speed v1 and a given area S one finds the maximum or minimum value for . The result is that reaches maximum value when .

Substituting this value results in: . The work rate obtainable from a cylinder of fluid with cross sectional area S and velocity v1 is: . The "power coefficient[3]" Cp (= P/Pwind) has a maximum value of: Cp.max = 16/27 = 0.593 (or 59.3%; however, coefficients of performance are usually expressed as a decimal, not a percentage). Rotor losses are the most significant energy losses in, for example, a wind mill. It is, therefore, important to reduce these as much as possible. Modern rotors achieve values for Cp in the range of 0.4 to 0.5, which is 70 to 80% of the theoretically possible maximum.

[edit] Points of interest


Note that the preceding analysis has no dependence on the geometry, therefore S may take any form provided that the flow travels axially from the entrance to the control volume to the exit, and the control volume has uniform entry and exit velocities. Note that any extraneous effects can only decrease the performance of the turbine since this analysis was idealized to disregard friction. Any non-ideal effects would detract from the energy available in the incoming fluid, lowering the overall efficiencies. There have been several arguments made about this limit and the effects of nozzles, and there is a distinct difficulty when considering power devices that use more captured area than the area of the rotor. Some manufacturers and inventors have made claims of exceeding the Betz' limit by doing just this; in reality, their initial assumptions are wrong, since they are using a substantially larger A1 than the size of their rotor, and this skews their efficiency number. In reality, the rotor is just as efficient as it would be without the nozzle or capture device, but by adding such a device you make more power available in the upstream wind from the rotor. Observation: If we use the middle following (harmonic mean) of the speeds

To take the place of Vavg = (V1 + V2) / 2, then if V2 = 0 then Vavg = 0 for whatever value of V1 (impact without motion). The calculation is very simple and gives a 50% output.

[edit] Modern development


In 1935 H. Glauert derived the expression for turbine efficiency, when the angular component of velocity is taken into account, by applying an energy balance across the rotor plane.[4] Due to the Glauert model, efficiency is below the Betz limit, and asymptotically approaches this limit when the tip speed ratio goes to infinity. In 2001, Gorban, Gorlov and Silantyev introduced an exactly solvable model (GGS), that considers non-uniform pressure distribution and curvilinear flow across the turbine plane (issues not included in the Betz approach).[5] The GGS model predicts that peak efficiency is achieved when the flow through the turbine is approximately 61% which is very similar to the Betz result of 2/3, but the GGS predicted peak efficiency is much smaller: 30.1%. Recently, viscous computations based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) were applied to wind turbine modelling and demonstrated satisfactory agreement with experiment.[6] Computed optimal efficiency is, typically, between the Betz limit and the GGS solution.

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