Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating

Efficiency and durability are critical issues that affect widely-adopted aerofoil-power generator as a sustainable source of electrical power. Even though high wind power density can be achieved; installing wind turbines in desert condition has difficulties including thermal variation, high turbule...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Hasibul Hasan, Shugata Ahmed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deer Hill Publications 2017-09-01
Series:International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
Online Access:http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/28
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spelling doaj-7e918dda6a864f739b2bb5222039a6d92020-11-24T21:59:01ZengDeer Hill PublicationsInternational Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture0128-18522017-09-012310.26776/ijemm.02.03.2017.0120Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-CoatingMuhammad Hasibul Hasan0Shugata Ahmed1Ryerson University, CanadaUniversity of Dhaka, Bangladesh Efficiency and durability are critical issues that affect widely-adopted aerofoil-power generator as a sustainable source of electrical power. Even though high wind power density can be achieved; installing wind turbines in desert condition has difficulties including thermal variation, high turbulence and sand storms. Sand blasting on turbine blade surface at high velocities causes erosion resulting turbine efficiency drop. Damage-induced erosion phenomena and aeroelastic performance of the blades needed to be investigated. Suitable coating may prevent erosion to a great extent. A numerical investigation of erosion on NACA 4412 wind turbine blade has been performed using commercial computational fluid dynamics software ANSYS FLUENT 14.5 release. Discrete phase model (DPM) has been used for modelling multi-phase flow of air and sand particles over the turbine blade. Governing equations have been solved by finite volume method (FVM). Conventional 30-70% glass fibre resin and non-conventional jute fibre composite have been used as turbine blade material. Sand particles of  diameter have been injected from 20, 30, 45, 60 and 90 degree angles at 500C temperature. Erosion rate, wall shear stress and strain rate have been calculated for different wind velocities and impingement angles. Simulation results for higher velocities deviate from the results observed at lower wind velocities. In simulation, erosion rate is highest for impingement angle at low wind velocities, which has been validated by experiment with a mean absolute error (MAE) of 5.56%. Erosion rate and wall shear stress are higher on jute composite fibre than glass fibre resin. Developed shear stress on wind turbine blade surface is highest for  impingement angle at all velocities. On the other hand, exerted pressure on turbine blade surface is found highest for 9  angle of attack. Experimental results, with or without Titanium nitride(TiN) nano-coating, also revealed that surface roughness augments with increasing impingement angles. Nano-coating (TiN) by RF sputtering technique reduced the surface roughness significantly as oppose to uncoated samples. Highest roughness has been observed on uncoated blade surface collided with 0.3-0.69 mm diameter brown aluminium oxide particles. http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/28
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Hasibul Hasan
Shugata Ahmed
spellingShingle Muhammad Hasibul Hasan
Shugata Ahmed
Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
author_facet Muhammad Hasibul Hasan
Shugata Ahmed
author_sort Muhammad Hasibul Hasan
title Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
title_short Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
title_full Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
title_fullStr Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
title_full_unstemmed Wear Resistance Performance of Conventional and Non-Conventional Wind Turbine Blades with TiN Nano-Coating
title_sort wear resistance performance of conventional and non-conventional wind turbine blades with tin nano-coating
publisher Deer Hill Publications
series International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
issn 0128-1852
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Efficiency and durability are critical issues that affect widely-adopted aerofoil-power generator as a sustainable source of electrical power. Even though high wind power density can be achieved; installing wind turbines in desert condition has difficulties including thermal variation, high turbulence and sand storms. Sand blasting on turbine blade surface at high velocities causes erosion resulting turbine efficiency drop. Damage-induced erosion phenomena and aeroelastic performance of the blades needed to be investigated. Suitable coating may prevent erosion to a great extent. A numerical investigation of erosion on NACA 4412 wind turbine blade has been performed using commercial computational fluid dynamics software ANSYS FLUENT 14.5 release. Discrete phase model (DPM) has been used for modelling multi-phase flow of air and sand particles over the turbine blade. Governing equations have been solved by finite volume method (FVM). Conventional 30-70% glass fibre resin and non-conventional jute fibre composite have been used as turbine blade material. Sand particles of  diameter have been injected from 20, 30, 45, 60 and 90 degree angles at 500C temperature. Erosion rate, wall shear stress and strain rate have been calculated for different wind velocities and impingement angles. Simulation results for higher velocities deviate from the results observed at lower wind velocities. In simulation, erosion rate is highest for impingement angle at low wind velocities, which has been validated by experiment with a mean absolute error (MAE) of 5.56%. Erosion rate and wall shear stress are higher on jute composite fibre than glass fibre resin. Developed shear stress on wind turbine blade surface is highest for  impingement angle at all velocities. On the other hand, exerted pressure on turbine blade surface is found highest for 9  angle of attack. Experimental results, with or without Titanium nitride(TiN) nano-coating, also revealed that surface roughness augments with increasing impingement angles. Nano-coating (TiN) by RF sputtering technique reduced the surface roughness significantly as oppose to uncoated samples. Highest roughness has been observed on uncoated blade surface collided with 0.3-0.69 mm diameter brown aluminium oxide particles.
url http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/28
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