Prof. Eize Stamhuis from the University of Groningen (the Netherlands) has received a European patent for a biomimetic wind turbine design based on the wings of albatrosses. Biomimetics means that you use nature as an example for technological applications.
The wind turbine design is a result of the research in the biomimetics group of Prof. Stamhuis, within the Energy and Sustainability Research Institute Groningen (ESRIG). For a number of years, his group has been conducting research into improving the yield of wind turbines, particularly at low wind speeds.
Sea birds such as albatrosses and petrels can handle low wind speeds very well. Smaller birds will beat their wings faster or in a different way to generate sufficient upward force, but the wings of, for example, albatrosses are too long to do that. Instead, they let their wings wiggle around the longitudinal axis, which is called oscillating. Due to these oscillations, the air flow over the wing almost separates from the wing surface but in the same time yielding higher upwards forces. Before the air flow completely separates, the wing 'wiggles' back. In this way the peak forces are up to twice as high and the average lift forces as high as 125 to 150 percent of the normal force.
Prof. Stamhuis tested this principle of oscillating wings in a flow tank and subsequently applied it to wind turbines. In tests with a relatively small wind turbine in the ESRIG wind tunnel, it was found that at low wind speeds even more than 200 percent of the normal energy was generated when the 'Albatrozz principle' was applied. In order to demonstrate the functionality on a large scale, the researchers hope to test it on two turbines with a rotor diameter of 52 meters and a maximum available power of 850 kW.
The discovery was first registered in a national patent, but is now also registered in a European patent. In addition, patenting in China is pending.