| feature: noise workshop |
Wind farms: a noisy neighbour?
By Zoë Casey
Photo: Luis Marinho
W
ind turbine noise is an issue fraught with emotion. Noise often comes up as a complaint from local wind turbine opposition groups and it is clearly something that wind turbine manufacturers, designers and developers alike must face up to, even if a vast body of exists to show that there are no effects on human health from wind turbine noise. In amongst the complaints that noise might ruin a good night’s sleep, what are the real issues, how big are they in reality, and what can be done about them?
tips designs - both of which make the blade much more slender and less noisy as it cuts the air. Some designers have also started to explore “add-on” concepts, such as attaching extra features to a blade to further streamline its movement, although this approach is very sensitive to local conditions and can be a success or failure, he said. “Blades undergo acoustic wind tunnel testing to find the right designs: many noise sources can be supressed by good design,” Oerlemans stated. Noise from the nacelle is easier to reduce, and can be achieved by adding greater nacelle insulation, he added.
Back to basics
“The main turbine noise comes from the downward sweep of the blades.” 16
Noise emanating from wind turbines comes from two principal sources, Stefan Oerlemans, an engineer at Siemens, speaking at an EWEA technology workshop on noise held in Oxford in December, said. “There is the mechanical noise from the turbine’s nacelle caused by the gearbox and generator, and there is the aerodynamic noise from the wind turbine’s blade,” he explained. “The dominant of these two sources is the blade, mainly during the blade’s downwards stroke during a rotation,” he said. As blade lengths have increased over the years – a wind turbine rotor is now bigger than the wingspan of a Boeing 747 and turbines have grown from 200 kw power ratings up to 7.5 MW – then the potential for greater noise levels goes up too. However, since the earlier days of modern wind power, turbine blades designs have improved drastically. Designs of earlier modern turbines were inspired by 1930s aircraft designs, Oerlemans said. But today blades are custom made with much thinner trailing edge designs and aerodynamic blade
Noise, what noise? While wind turbine noise from the outset might seem like something scientific that can be measured categorically it is a highly complex process once ‘in the field’. “Measuring noise is very frustrating, especially in residential areas where background noise is very similar,” Andy Mckenzie, from Hayes Mckenzie Partnership, said. Wind turbine noise can be intermingled with the noise of rainfall, geographical water features, the sound of gravel crunching under car tyres, the wind blowing through the trees, farmyard noises and – one of the biggest annoyances to measurement – the noise of passing traffic. “All these and other sources affect the results,” Mckenzie said. What is more, it is impossible to measure everywhere. Places like people’s back gardens – and if we’re talking about noise affecting public opinion this is surely a key place to measure – are usually off limits. And there is the effect of the wind direction over the noise survey period – are the measurement instruments downwind from the wind farm? – he added.
WIND DIRECTIONS | February 2013