Innovative Wind Turbine Designs Part II

Non-conventional wind turbines

Here is another interesting Innovative Wind Turbine Designs design. The idea behind this wind turbine was to home in on simplicity: Produce an off-shore turbine that has the bare necessities to operate and remove all components that do contribute directly to power generation.

This has a welcoming effect on the production costs. As you can see from the illustration above, the turbine has several small rotors with a universal joint that enables it to tilt. That means it can bend with the wind. In tests, the prototype was able to produce 6,000 watts in winds of 32.5 mph. If the concept can be scaled up successfully, the use of Super turbines could mean a tremendous jump in the amount of energy wind farms could produce.

They can also be connected to blimps- small tethered dirigibles shown here.

sky serpent Innovative Wind Turbine Designs Part II

Innovative Wind Turbine Designs

The adherence to back-to-basics simplicity means that the Selsam Super Turbine has no complex gearboxes or slip rings to turn and steer the turbines. Its long flexible drive shaft mounted on versatile universal joint housing means that it can twist and turn at multiple angles to gain optimum power creation from prevailing winds. Selsam uses the analogy of the human spine, saying that it can bend and twist from side to side and backwards and forward, but the vital cord within still carries out its function.

The number of small rotors along its shaft varies depending on the length and particular design need. Most versions have between six and eight rotors but could go up to twelve. They rotate in a synchronized fashion with the “exhaust” of the upper rotors helping to drive the ones below.  Another analogy may help- this one provided by the Company itself:

“Like a flock of geese, each rotor favourably affects the next in line. Like a set of louvres, the tilted rotors pull in the fresh wind from above, deflecting their wakes downward to ensure fresh wind for succeeding rotors and, like a stack of kites, to add overall lift which helps support the driveshaft against gravity and downwind thrust forces. The rotors act as gyroscopes or spinning tops, stabilizing the driveshaft where they are attached.”

Turbines on a mast2 300x2251 Innovative Wind Turbine Designs Part II

As said above a dirigible can be anchored to the upper end of the turbine’s spine. By being anchored in this way the entire shaft can rotate freely, adding its motion to the rotors and thus adding greater power generation. The blimp itself could also be covered with solar cells- so that virtually everything is harnessing renewable energy.

Although these Super Turbines can be used on land, the primary employment will be offshore. Moored by tethers to the sea bottom, the shaft’s fulcrum will be at or very close to the water surface, allowing maximum “twist ability”. But what happens in severe storms? There have been suggestions that the super turbine could be filled with water and laid down onto or beneath the water’s surface until the storm has abated. But this wouldn’t work with a dirigible attached unless that was manually untethered and stored.

It has to be recognized that there may be some disadvantages to be overcome: The universal joint for its fulcrum and the flexible drive shaft have proved themselves in smaller test models, but with that be able to successfully translate into full-scale commercial turbines?  There may also be the potential to impact adversely on passing seabirds, boats, and ships- especially in unpredictable conditions. The inventor of the Selsam Super Turbine, Doug Selsam, and his wind turbines, were featured on the Discovery Science channel, in a program called “Innovation Nation” broadcast on 1 September this year.

Doug Selsam 300x2181 Innovative Wind Turbine Designs Part II
Doug Selsam