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Power The Almighty Buck Science Technology The 2000 Beanies

Inventors of Omnidirectional Wind Turbine Win James Dyson Award (theguardian.com) 129

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: A spinning turbine that can capture wind traveling in any direction and could transform how consumers generate electricity in cities has won its inventors a prestigious international award and ~$38,000 prize. Nicolas Orellana, 36, and Yaseen Noorani, 24, MSc students at Lancaster University, scooped the James Dyson award for their O-Wind Turbine, which -- in a technological first -- takes advantage of both horizontal and vertical winds without requiring steering.

O-Wind Turbine is a 25cm sphere with geometric vents that sits on a fixed axis and spins when wind hits it from any direction. When wind energy turns the device, gears drive a generator that converts the power of the wind into electricity. The students believe the device, which could take at least five years to be put into commercial production, could be installed on large structures such as the side of a building or balcony, where wind speeds are highest.
Dyson, who chose the winners, hailed it as "an ingenious concept." He continued: "Designing something that solves a problem is an intentionally broad brief. It invites talented, young inventors to do more than just identify real problems. It empowers them to use their ingenuity to develop inventive solutions. O-Wind Turbine does exactly that. It takes the enormous challenge of producing renewable energy and using geometry it can harness energy in places where we've scarcely been looking -- cities."
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Inventors of Omnidirectional Wind Turbine Win James Dyson Award

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  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Thursday November 15, 2018 @11:44PM (#57653256)

    https://newatlas.com/2018-dyso... [newatlas.com]

    Seems a little premature to get excited about

    The team, from Lancaster University, tested their prototypes with a hairdryer, which was enough to prove its initial efficacy and win the UK national Dyson award a month ago, before being announced as the global winner today.

    • Whatever, I can put one of these next to my wife and daughter's heads while they spend a combined hour, or more, on their hair in the mornings.
      • Well if you want real power you need to harness the energy of small children, to power those hair dryers in the first place.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The wind energy available at rooftop level is pitiful.

      It will be just as useful when the bearings seize as when it moves.

  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @12:13AM (#57653358)

    Is this device subject to the same problem, which is that at any moment half your vanes are moving INTO the wind?

    • Is this device subject to the same problem, which is that at any moment half your vanes are moving INTO the wind?

      Yes, but remember why vertical turbines still exist especially in an urban (reads building top) environment, they have other benefits. Efficiency is just one part of the equation.

    • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @07:32AM (#57654422) Journal
      That is the problem. The efficiency will be poorer compared to the propeller type, traditional three blade, wind turbines.

      But, efficiency does not matter, because the source of energy, the wind, is practically free. So it does not matter if you waste 80% of zero cost thing or 60% of zero cost thing.

      Its the cost per megawatt, maintenance etc that will determine its usability. Spins on vertical axis, does not need complex steering mechanism. large towers with super heavy horizontal load on top is not needed. It will cut down the cost a lot. Lots of internal wanes that will improve the structural integrity and you can probably get away with cheaper recycled plastic, reinforced with metal strips would be helpful. The same internal vanes prove a lot more of the "skin" to the airflow increasing the drag (and that is good in this case, more drag, more energy leaving the airstream and transferring to the turbine.)

      Some shaping of the vanes, adjusting the gaps and passages, may be eject the air upwards etc might improve the design.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        So it does not matter if you waste 80% of zero cost thing or 60% of zero cost thing.

        It matters very much.... if you spend, say, half as much money building these but they only harness 20% as much energy, then it's not a positive return on investment.

        Cheaper is always nice, but if you have to make an even greater compromise on efficiency than the amount of money you saved, then you aren't actually getting anything better for your dollar.

      • That is the problem. The efficiency will be poorer compared to the propeller type, traditional three blade, wind turbines.

        Or to a Savonius turbine, which predates our entire civilization.

        But, efficiency does not matter, because the source of energy, the wind, is practically free. So it does not matter if you waste 80% of zero cost thing or 60% of zero cost thing.

        Of course it matters. It matters a hell of a lot. That's because...

        Its the cost per megawatt, maintenance etc that will determine its usability.

        Well, that's part of it. The other part is that even if it makes more sense to spend the money in some other way, we're not working as a team but through competition, so some of these might get built even if it makes no sense whatsoever.

        This design fails in three obvious ways. One, the way we're discussing here already. Two, it wastes still more efficiency with gearing. Three,

        • Three, it would be be more expensive per MW than current designs just based on its shape.

          That is the metric it will live and die by. If its installation cost per MW is too much it will die, without any arguments.

          • That is the metric it will live and die by.

            Nope. It's the installation cost to the individual that it will live and die by. The installation cost of a superior solution will be lower, but the individual making the purchase decision won't have the reach to make the correct decision, so they will make the most correct decision available to them.

            There's no way in hell this is going to surpass existing wind turbine installations made in places where they actually make sense in cost per MW, but it will fit into smaller holes in smaller budgets and that i

        • Already existing design on shore windturbine without any subsidies competes with coal. Off shore design breakthroughs are just a matter of time. These off shore installations and their concrete caissons might actually be the seed that creates something the equivalent of the Great Barrier Reef!
    • by Pollux ( 102520 )

      When engineering, sometimes you have to trade efficiency for efficacy.

  • / me puts forth that Chicago should be the 1st city to test implementation...

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @12:36AM (#57653438)

    With that much money, they could afford to purchase both a Dyson fan AND a Dyson vacuum cleaner for each of their dorm rooms!

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      A guy who had been my boss went on to lead a team who won an award for the same idea: small wind-turbines for city roof tops. The turbine had a different shape though (and was probably much less effective).

      He was an alcoholic ... so he spent the prize money on booze.

      A vacuum cleaner and a fan would still have been better.

  • Pretty cool (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @01:28AM (#57653574) Journal

    Nifty idea and I can see a lot of potential applications, especially when these are used in groups of small or medium size turbines.

    Props to these guys for working this out.

  • 25cm across (Score:4, Funny)

    by quenda ( 644621 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @02:20AM (#57653676)

    At 25cm diameter, we can't really go calling it a Dyson Sphere.

  • The alternative energy centre in Wales has had omnidirectional wind turbines for twenty or thirty years.

    This may well be superior in some way or ways, but which ones? To what degree?

  • slick (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @04:02AM (#57653890) Journal
    First decent design in quite some time.
  • PR not bad for this award regardless of its merit. The other entries might have been less marketable. Lava lamps has their run.
  • Looks like this design uses an awful lot of material. I wonder if that really scales, both physically (weight) and economically (cost).
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      This.

      The simple approximation of power available to a wind turbine involves the mass of air crossing the 'swept area' of the turbine per unit time. There is no escaping the fact that the more power you want, the larger this swept area has to be. Hence the long blades on 'typical' wind machines.

  • Gotta love how the Brits make out like James Dyson is a living Einstein or Newton. He makes vacuum cleaners. Overpriced vacuum cleaners.
    • Yeah, but he has a BRITISH accent, which is cool. Unlike Einstein, whose German accent is evil and reminds us of Nazis...

  • 5 years to commercialize!

    OK so their 1st product will be... wait...wait...wait...wait...wait

    DYSON produces the ARTIS CAP for chimney's that SUCKS. thanks to who? It will greatly fix fireplaces that draft poorly or not at all.

    wait...wait...wait

    The original inventors will not go into electricity

    This product looks unprofitable due to inertial mass above the rotational bearing point.

  • So this thing takes up 3D space to collect 2D air. Doesn't sound like anything that is going to scale up, it's going to top out at a pretty small size. Propeller efficiency is a very well studied field and this certainly isn't a top performer.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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