한번 태풍으로 50년 사용 전기 얻는 풍력발전기 Storm chasers: the typhoon turbine that could power Japan for 50 years: VIDEO


Storm chasers: the typhoon turbine that could power Japan for 50 years


"태풍은 그저 재난일 뿐이다"

일본 엔지니어 '아츠시 시미즈'의 말이다.

그는 세계 최초로 태풍 풍력발전기를 개발했으며 자연의 엄청난 힘을 에너지화할 수 있다고 주장한다.


이 태풍 풍력발전기는 열대성 싸이클론의 막강한 힘에 견딜 수 있을 뿐 아니라 이용할 수도 있다.

그는 단 한번의 태풍으로 50년간 사용할 전기 에너지를 얻을 수 있다고 말하고 있다.


그가 발명한 수직형 매그너스 풍력 발전기는 강풍에는 약하고 풍향에도 쉽게 대응할 수 없는 기존의 풍차형 풍력 발전기와 달리 태풍이 몰고 온 강력한 바람에도 맞설 수 있고, 발전까지 가능한 독특한 제품인데요. 전통적인 프로펠러 방식이 아니라 야구의 커브볼처럼 회전하는 원통형이나 공이 바람의 흐름 속에 놓일 때 그 바람의 흐름 방향에 수직 방향으로 힘이 작용하는 현상인 매그너스 효과를 이용해 회전하고 전기를 얻어낸다고 한다.


황기철 콘페이퍼 에디터

Ki Chul Hwang, conpaper editor


Junko Ogura, Jenni Marsh, CNN

Updated 0111 GMT (0911 HKT) November 9, 2016 ,

Tokyo, Japan (CNN)"Typhoons are normally nothing but a disaster," says Atsushi Shimizu.


But that's not the case for this Japanese engineer, who believes these violent forces of nature could solve Japan's green energy problem.


Shimizu has invented the world's first typhoon turbine. A robust, egg beater-shaped wind turbine, designed not only to withstand the incredible force of a tropical cyclone, but also to harness it.


A mature typhoon produces a level of kinetic energy "equivalent to about half the world-wide electrical generating capacity," according to the Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory.

The energy from one typhoon, says Shimizu, could power Japan for 50 years.


Japanese engineer Atsushi Shimizu standing before his latest invention, a wind turbine that can harness and reuse 

the wind energy produced from a typhoon. Photo courtesy of Challenergy

edited by kcontents


End of an era

Before the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in March, 2011, nuclear power was expected to account for 60% of Japan's primary energy by 2100.


But the devastating earthquake and tsunami, which killed 19,000 people, also caused three nuclear meltdowns and derailed that plan.


Today, Japan imports about 84% of its energy requirements, and many of its nuclear reactors are now dormant, as the country shies away from this energy source.


Attempts at utilizing wind power have been largely unsuccessful.


"For decades, Japan has brought in European-style wind turbines, not designed for typhoon zones, and installed them with no careful consideration -- they've broken almost entirely," says Shimizu.


During Typhoon Usagi, in 2013, for example, eight turbines collapsed at China's Honghaiwan wind farm, in eastern Guangdong, and a further eight were damaged, according to Windpower Intelligence.


Consequently, solar power has been the focus of the Japanese government, and solar panels are now not an uncommon sight on urban homes.


"But in terms of energy," says Shimizu, "Japan actually has a lot more wind power than it does solar power, it's just not utilized."


The country has already seen 6 typhoons in 2016.

"Japan has the potential to be a super power of wind," says Shimizu.


The next superpower

In 2013, Shimizu quit his job, founded green tech firm Challenergy, and won funding to invent a wind turbine "that is unbreakable by a typhoon."


Shimizu and his team made two fundamental changes to the design of conventional wind turbines.

First, they designed an omnidirectional vertical axis that is able withstand Japan's unpredictable wind patterns.


Then they incorporated the Magnus effect -- the sideways force that causes a spinning object to deviate from a straight path, like the spin on a penalty kick in soccer.


The Magnus effect offers an unprecedented level of control over the turbine's blades. By tightening the center rod, engineers can adjust the speed of the blades to ensure they don't spin out of control in a storm.


When the Challenergy team last simulated their invention in July 2015, it achieved 30% efficiency. Propeller-based wind turbines typically achieve 40% efficiency, but can't operate in a typhoon.


In July, the first prototype was installed in Okinawa. Now all the Challenergy team needs to test their creation's efficiency in real life is a typhoon.


"I want to install our wind-power generator at the new National Stadium," Shimizu says, of the facility being built for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. "Or on the Tokyo Tower, because the Eiffel Tower installed a wind-power generator last year at the time of the COP21 (climate summit)."




For Shimizu, it's a service he owes his country.

"Our generation reaped the benefit of nuclear power -- we never experience a power black out because of it," Shimizu says.


"Now we are responsible for changing the future."

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/09/27/asia/typhoon-catchers-japan-challenergy



kcontents

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