Physics Proposal
Physics Proposal
General
Powered
Physics 2
Generator for
Charging
Kenneth Duhaylungsod
Phejie Collamar
Project Title: Wind Powered Electrical Generator for Charging
Project Objective:
The objective of this project is to design and construct a wind-powered electrical
generator that can be used to generate an electromagnetic power and power a charging circuit
board. The goal is to demonstrate the principles of electromagnetic induction and create a
functional, self-powered electrical generator using the provided materials.
Materials Needed:
Design:
According to Supardi, A., & Dzikri, N. M. (2019), One type of generator used in renewable
power generation systems is a permanent wind generator. This generator provides a constant
excitation produced by a fan blades, but does not provide a mechanism to regulate the
excitation current. It can also directly generate a voltage when the rotor has been rotated,
but it is quite difficult to control the output voltage when the load is changed.
Theories:
2. Kinetic Energy
The use of kinetic energy, stored in the rotational masses of Variable Speed
Wind Turbines (VSWT), for inertial support is well established. The idea is to
employ the fast control response of the VSWT to inject additional power for
the short duration following the disturbance. However, the variable speed
operation of the VSWT poses a great challenge in successfully designing an
appropriate control approach, applicable for wide operating ranges, capable of
minimizing the effects of energy regain by the Wind Turbine (WT) after the
support period. To address this issue, this paper proposes a modified inertia-
emulation scheme, based on Step Over-Production (SOP) approach. Further, to
enable optimum energy transfer and to handle the problem of variable Stored
Kinetic Energy (SKE), the shaping parameters of the proposed scheme are
optimized using the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) algorithm. The results
show that the proposed approach can limit the fall of frequency while reducing
post disturbances across the entire operating range of the WT.
References:
Daniels, J. J., Vendl, M., Ehsani, M. R., & Allred, B. J. (2008). Electromagnetic induction
methods. Handbook of agricultural geophysics, 109-128.
Cortina, G., Calaf, M., & Cal, R. B. (2016). Distribution of mean kinetic energy around an
isolated wind turbine and a characteristic wind turbine of a very large wind farm.
Physical Review Fluids, 1(7), 074402.