THURSDAY 01 DECEMBER, 2011 |

The Floating Axis Wind Turbine (FAWT)
by Energy Matters

Offshore wind farms have traditionally been more expensive to build and maintain
than their land based counterparts, but a floating axis wind turbine concept
could result in a substantial cost reduction of offshore power generation.
There has been increasing interest in using vertical axis wind turbines offshore
instead of the traditional windmill- type horizontal axis
wind
turbines due to advantages relating to cost and ease of maintenance.
According to researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
and University of Tokyo, their floating axis wind turbine (FAWT) takes the
vertical turbine one step further by challenging the idea that a wind turbine's axis should be stable
and in an upright position.
The researchers propose a design based on a cylindrical float that rotates with
upper structures of the turbine. The tilt angle of the structure varies
according to the balance of turbine thrust and stability of the float. The
torque of the turbine is converted to electricity by bearing rollers and
generators above the sea surface, positioned at a low height to provide easy
maintenance access.
In a paper published in
Environmental
Letters, the authors claim their studies to date shows the installed cost
per rated power of the FAWT is 50% and 57% of those in the referenced HAWT
(horizontal axis wind turbine) and guyed VAWT (vertical axis wind turbine)
configurations respectively. The estimated cost of electricity produced is
estimated to be around 25% lower than that of the base HAWT.
"FAWTs inherit the simple mechanism and low maintenance cost of VAWTs,"
the paper states. "Installation of FAWTs does not require floating cranes and other specifically designed service vessels."
While the authors acknowledge there are many unknown factors and possible challenges in
relation to their design at this point in time, they believe the FAWT will be a breakthrough in
lowering the cost of offshore wind power.
Lead author Hiromichi Akimoto hopes further research on the concept will lead to
the construction of a small test plant.
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