Albuquerque Journal

Study: Carbon fiber could offer wind industry savings

- BY MELISSAE FELLET AND KRISTEN MEUB

Anew carbon fiber material could bring cost and performanc­e benefits to the wind industry if developed commercial­ly, according to a study led by researcher­s at Sandia National Laboratori­es.

Wind blades containing carbon fiber weigh 25% less than ones made from traditiona­l fiberglass materials. That means carbon fiber blades could be longer than fiberglass ones and, therefore, capture more energy in locations with low wind. A switch to carbon fiber could also extend blade lifetime because carbon fiber materials have a high fatigue resistance, said Brandon Ennis, a wind energy researcher at Sandia Labs and the principal investigat­or for the project.

The project is funded by DOE’s Wind Energy Technologi­es Office in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Partners on the project include Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Montana State University.

Of all the companies producing wind turbines, only one uses carbon fiber materials extensivel­y in their blade designs. Wind turbine blades are the largest single-piece composite structures in the world, and the wind industry could represent the largest market for carbon fiber materials by weight if a material that competed on a costvalue basis to fiberglass reinforced composites was commercial­ly available, Ennis said.

However, the wind and carbon fiber industries do not currently overlap. The wind industry designs wind turbine blades using only commercial­ly available materials and the carbon fiber manufactur­ers face a hurdle to innovation due to high capital costs associated with introducin­g a new production line for the wind industry.

Wind applicatio­ns

Cost is the main considerat­ion during component design in the wind industry, yet turbine manufactur­ers also have to build blades that withstand the compressiv­e and fatigue loads that blades experience as they rotate for up to 30 years.

Ennis and his colleagues wondered if a novel low-cost carbon fiber developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory could meet performanc­e needs while also bringing cost benefits for the wind industry. This material starts with a widely available precursor from the textile industry that contains thick bundles of acrylic fibers. The manufactur­ing process, which heats the fibers to convert them to carbon, is followed by an intermedia­te step that pulls the carbon fiber into planks. The plank-making pultrusion process creates carbon fiber with high performanc­e and reliabilit­y needed for blade manufactur­ing and also allows for high production capacity.

When the research team studied the lowcost carbon fiber, they discovered it performed better than current commercial materials in terms of cost-specific properties of most interest to the wind industry.

ORNL provided developmen­tal samples of carbon fiber from its Carbon Fiber Technology Facility and composites made from this material as well as similar composites made from commercial­ly available carbon fiber for comparison.

Colleagues at Montana State University measured the mechanical properties of the novel carbon fiber versus commercial­ly available carbon fiber and standard fiberglass composites. Then Ennis combined these measuremen­ts with cost modeling results from ORNL. He used those data in a blade design analysis to assess the system impact of using the novel carbon fiber, instead of standard carbon fiber or fiberglass, as the main structural support in a wind blade.

The study was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Wind Energy Technologi­es Office.

Cost savings?

Ennis and his colleagues found the new carbon fiber material had 56% more compressiv­e strength per dollar than commercial­ly available carbon fiber, which is the industry baseline. Typically, manufactur­ers accommodat­e a lower compressiv­e strength by using more material to make a component, which then increases costs.

Considerin­g the higher compressiv­e strength per cost of the novel carbon fiber, Ennis’ calculatio­ns predicted about a 40% savings in material costs for a spar cap, which is the main structural component of a wind turbine blade, made from the new carbon fiber compared to commercial carbon fiber.

The novel carbon fiber also reduced predicted materials costs when compared to fiberglass for a land-based turbine design, due to the improved fatigue resistance. Other results from using the novel carbon fiber in blade design, such as decreased weight and increased fatigue lifetime, could influence the entire turbine design in ways that bring additional cost and performanc­e benefits too, Ennis said.

“While the optimal carbon fiber for the wind industry does not exist on the market yet, this new textile carbon fiber has performanc­e characteri­stics that have higher value for the specific loads that a wind turbine experience­s,” Ennis said. “Developing this material commercial­ly could enable the benefits of carbon fiber materials to be realized more broadly by the wind industry and lower the overall cost of wind energy.”

 ?? RANDY MONTOYA/SANDIA NATIONAL LABORATORI­ES ?? Sandia National Laboratori­es’ Brandon Ennis holds a carbon fiber plank, a new material that could bring cost and performanc­e benefits to the wind industry.
RANDY MONTOYA/SANDIA NATIONAL LABORATORI­ES Sandia National Laboratori­es’ Brandon Ennis holds a carbon fiber plank, a new material that could bring cost and performanc­e benefits to the wind industry.

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