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Green Power Study: Better Turbine Spacing for Large Wind Farms

High-resolution digital cameras, smoke, and laser pulses provide proof

Johns Hopkins University
Wed, 02/02/2011 - 05:00
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Large wind farms are being built around the world as a cleaner way to generate electricity, but operators are still searching for the most efficient way to arrange the massive turbines that turn moving air into power.

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To help steer wind-farm owners in the right direction, Charles Meneveau, a Johns Hopkins fluid mechanics and turbulence expert, working with a colleague in Belgium, has devised a new formula through which the optimal spacing for a large array of turbines can be obtained.

“I believe our results are quite robust,” says Meneveau, who is the Louis Sardella Professor of Mechanical Engineering in the university’s Whiting School of Engineering. “They indicate that large wind-farm operators are going to have to space their turbines farther apart.”

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