RAIL-TRANSPORTABLE WIND TURBINE TOWER
A tower is provided having a plurality of axial substantially tubular sections with an outer diameter no greater than a designated maximum diameter. At least one of the sections includes at least one reverse taper portion located near a base of the tower. The reverse taper portion has a first end, located near the base, having a first diameter. The reverse taper portion has a second end, opposed to the first end, having a second diameter. The first diameter is smaller than the second diameter.
Latest Patents:
The invention relates generally to wind turbine tower construction and more specifically to a wind turbine tower and its method of construction that permits rail transport of sections for large towers.
For many years it has been common practice to build steel wind tower sections separately in a workshop facility and then to move each complete section to the site, where the wind turbine tower installation was performed. The tower sections would typically have a cylindrical or slightly tapered shape, and each of the sections could in turn be divided along axial lines into an adequate number of shells.
Due to the ever-increasing demand for larger capacity towers and consequently larger dimensions of all parts needed to build such towers, a physical limit has been imposed by the infrastructure, e.g. the clearance on a bridge or in a tunnel or underpass.
The wind load increases as square of the wind speed and consequently, the higher the turbine towers are, the stronger should the structure be dimensioned, which in turn means that either the wall thickness should be increased or the diameter extended. It may be advantageous to increase tower diameter rather than the thickness of the steel plate or other wall material. Increased thickness would mean higher material costs and a requirement for heavier transportation vehicles, whether trucks, trains, ships, or helicopters, while diameters need to be small enough to limit vehicle heights in order to pass on bridges and though tunnels and underpasses. Also, thicker steel stock is harder to form and fabricate.
Accordingly, construction of tower sections for large wind turbine towers, where the section diameters fall within the maximum rail transport diameter, but which yet are strong enough to withstand the loads imposed on the sections may be advantageous.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to an apparatus and method for allowing sections of large wind turbine towers to be transported to a windfarm site by rail transport by construction of the tower sections to fall within an allowable space envelope for rail transport.
Briefly in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a tower is provided having a plurality of axial substantially tubular sections with an outer diameter no greater than a designated maximum diameter. At least one of the sections includes at least one reverse taper portion located near a base of the tower. The reverse taper portion has a first end, located near the base, having a first diameter. The reverse taper portion has a second end, opposed to the first end, having a second diameter. The first diameter is smaller than the second diameter.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a wind turbine tower is provided having a plurality of axial sections with an outer diameter no greater than a designated maximum diameter. The designated maximum diameter being a maximum diameter permitted for rail transport. At least one of the sections includes at least one reverse taper portion located near a base of the tower. The reverse taper portion has a first end, located near the base, having a first diameter. The reverse taper portion has a second end, opposed to the first end, having a second diameter. The first diameter is smaller than the second diameter.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout the drawings, wherein:
The following embodiments of the present invention have many advantages, including permitting wind turbine tower sections that have previously required large diameters for structural integrity to incorporate reduced diameters that fall within allowable space envelopes for rail transport.
The middle section 132 is comprised of cans 321-329 and the wall thickness of each can may vary from about 10 mm to about 25 mm. The diameter of the cans may vary from about 12 to about 14 feet (˜3.7 m to 4.3 m). The top section 133 is comprised of cans 331-340 and the wall thickness of each can may vary from about 8 mm to about 15 mm. The diameter of the cans may vary from about 10 feet to about 12 feet (˜3.0 m to 3.7 m). The height (or length) of each section may also vary. Typically the bottom section 131 is the shortest as it is also the heaviest. For an 80 to 100 meter tower, each section 131, 132, 133 may have a length of about 20 to about 35 meters.
Typically, a wind turbine customer will desire to attach the tower 102 to a ground foundation via a T-flange 410, which is a continuous part of the bottom shell section of the tower. The T-flange 410 consists of two annuli of a series of bolted connections. Between the two annuli, lies the bottom most part of the tower wall structure, consisting of a typically steel shell that continues up to the wind turbine nacelle or whatever entity is to be employed. A material shell, of which the tower consists, is responsible for carrying the loads induced by the wind or other necessary application. A shell of this kind most cost efficiently resists these bending loads by having the maximum possible diameter about a neutral axis 116. The T-flange 410, whose outer bolt annulus must be accommodated in transportation, forces the tower shell structure to not use the maximum outer diameter allowed by transportation and thus renders the tower shell structure less efficient in load resistance than might be possible with other configurations. By not using the maximum outer diameter, a cost inefficiency is manifested by having to increase tower shell thickness not only in the bottom tower shell, but potentially in all tower sections where the maximum potential outer diameter is not utilized. Each additional increase in thickness at a fixed outer diameter is less efficient than the previous due to ever decreasing average shell diameter and load bearing capability. Increasing tower shell diameter will allow for relative shell thicknesses to decrease roughly to a square power.
The angle between a vertical line and the side wall of reverse taper portion 1030 can be about one to about five degrees. However, angles above and below this range could also be employed, as desired in the specific application. The maximum diameter of the tower 1000 can be about 13 feet 6 inches (˜4.1 m) or less. However, it is to be understood that diameters above and below this range could also be employed, as desired in the specific application. The present invention provides a wind turbine tower having at least one reverse taper portion near the base of the tower that has an increasing diameter with increasing elevation. This reverse taper portion may be contained within one can, or may be distributed over two or more cans. In towers having a “non-can” type construction, the reverse taper may be located on the lower portion of the tower.
An angled portion 1030 and stepped portion 1130 have been shown in the drawings. However, it is to be understood that any suitable shape could be employed for the reverse taper portion near the base of the tower. For example, the reverse taper portion could have a straight, curved, compound curved or any other suitable shape.
Typically, rail carriers permit items of a maximum weight, width, height and length. The tower, according to aspects of the present invention, can be sized to fit within these limitations. The weight of each tower section can be designed to be under about 140,000 lbs (˜65,000 kg), or under any weight limit imposed by typical rail carriers or trucking companies. The width and height of each tower section can be designed to be under about 13 feet 6 inches (˜4.1 meters), or under any height and/or width limit imposed by typical rail carriers. The length of each tower section can be designed to be under about 89 feet (˜27 meters), or under any length limit imposed by typical rail carriers. Rail transport outside the U.S. is also constrained by similar considerations of weight, width, height and length, but with sizes specific to the locale. Accordingly, an improved tower has been provided that can be shipped by rail, enabling less costly transportation for large towers. A single train can transport many wind turbine towers, whereas at least three trucks were required to transport a single tower.
The present invention was described in conjunction with a tower for a wind turbine; however, it is to be understood that the tower, according to aspects of the present invention, may be useful for any application needing elevated towers. For example, the present invention could be applied to electrical utility power transmission wire towers, communication towers, on or off-shore wind turbine towers, lighthouses, fire monitoring towers, agricultural silos, residential or commercial applications, and any other application requiring a tower.
While only certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.
Claims
1. A tower comprising:
- a plurality of axial substantially tubular sections, the sections including an outer diameter no greater than a designated maximum diameter;
- wherein at least one of said plurality of axial substantially tubular sections includes at least one reverse taper portion located near a base of said tower, the at least one reverse taper portion having a first end, located near said base, having a first diameter and a second end opposed to the first end having a second diameter, where the first diameter is smaller than the second diameter.
2. The tower according to claim 1, the at least one reverse taper portion having a profile that is at least one of straight, stepped, curved, and compound curved.
3. The tower according to claim 1, the designated maximum diameter being a maximum diameter permitted for rail transport, and wherein the designated maximum diameter is equal to or less than about 13 feet 6 inches.
4. The tower according to claim 1, each of said plurality of axial substantially tubular sections having a weight no greater than a designated maximum weight, and wherein, the designated maximum weight is equal to or less than a weight permitted for rail transport.
5. The tower according to claim 4, wherein the designated maximum weight is equal to or less than about 140,000 pounds.
6. The tower according to claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of axial substantially tubular sections have a length no greater than a designated maximum length, and wherein, the designated maximum length is equal to or less than a length permitted for rail transport.
7. The tower according to claim 6, wherein the designated maximum length is equal to or less than about 89 feet.
8. The tower according to claim 1, wherein the at least one reverse taper portion is angled off of vertical by an angle θ, wherein θ is between about one and about five degrees.
9. The tower according to claim 1, wherein said plurality of axial substantially tubular sections include a bottom section, at least a portion of said bottom section having said at least one reverse taper portion.
10. The tower according to claim 9, said bottom section comprising:
- a plurality of substantially cylindrical stacked cans; and
- at least one can having a reverse taper disposed at or near a bottom of said tower.
11. The tower according to claim 10, said bottom section comprising two cans having a reverse taper disposed at or near a bottom of said tower.
12. The tower according to claim 10, wherein the at least one can having a reverse taper has a taper that is angled off of vertical by an angle θ, wherein θ is between about one and about five degrees.
13. The tower according to claim 1, the at least one reverse taper portion comprising a stepped portion having a smaller diameter near the first end and a larger diameter near the second end.
14. The tower according to claim 1, wherein the tower is a wind turbine tower.
15. A wind turbine tower comprising:
- a plurality of axial sections, the sections including an outer diameter no greater than a designated maximum diameter, the designated maximum diameter being a maximum diameter permitted for rail transport; and
- wherein at least one of said plurality of axial sections includes at least one reverse taper portion located near a base of said wind turbine tower, the at least one reverse taper portion having a first end, located near said base, having a first diameter and a second end opposed to the first end having a second diameter, where the first diameter is smaller than the second diameter.
16. The wind turbine tower according to claim 15, wherein the designated maximum diameter is equal to or less than about 13 feet 6 inches.
17. The wind turbine tower according to claim 15, wherein each of the axial sections has a weight no greater than a designated maximum weight, the designated maximum weight being equal to or less than a weight permitted for rail transport; and
- wherein each of the axial sections have a length no greater than a designated maximum length, the designated maximum length being equal to or less than a length permitted for rail transport.
18. The wind turbine tower according to claim 15, wherein the plurality of axial sections include a bottom section, at least a portion of said bottom section having the at least one reverse taper portion, and wherein the at least one reverse taper portion is angled off of vertical by an angle θ, wherein θ is between about one and about five degrees.
19. The wind turbine tower according to claim 18, said bottom section comprising:
- a plurality of substantially cylindrical stacked cans; and
- at least one reverse taper can having a diameter that increases with increasing height, the at least one reverse taper can disposed at or near a bottom of said wind turbine tower.
20. The wind turbine tower according to claim 19, said bottom section comprising at least two reverse taper cans disposed at or near a bottom of said wind turbine tower.
Type: Application
Filed: Jun 15, 2009
Publication Date: Jun 3, 2010
Applicant:
Inventors: Bharat S. Bagepalli (Niskayuna, NY), Hueseyin Karaca (Herne), Ingo Paura (Meppen), Nathaniel S. Dean (Latham, NY)
Application Number: 12/484,645
International Classification: E04H 12/00 (20060101);