Efficiency of three wind energy generator systems
Journal article, 1996

This paper presents a method to calculate the average efficiency from the turbine shaft to the grid in wind energy converters. The average efficiency of three 500 kW systems are compared. The systems are: a conventional grid-connected four-pole induction generator equipped with a gear, a variablespeed synchronous generator equipped with a gear and a frequency converter, and a directly driven variablespeed generator equipped with a frequency converter. In this paper it is shown that a variable-speed generator system can be almost as efficient as one for constant speed, although it has much higher losses at rated load. The increased turbine efficiency that variable speed leads to has not been included in this paper. It is also found that a directly driven generator can be more efficient than a conventional four-pole generator equipped with a gear.

Wind energy

Variable speed

Losses

Frequency converter

Efficiency

Constant speed

Generator

Directly driven generator

Gear

Author

Anders Grauers

Department of electric Power Engineering, Electrical Machines and Power Electronics

IEEE Transactions on Energy Conversion

0885-8969 (ISSN) 15580059 (eISSN)

Vol. 11 3 650-657

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Subject Categories

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

More information

Created

10/7/2017