What is the wind energy generator?
wind energy generator is any device that converts wind energy into a usable form of energy. The most common type of wind energy generator is a wind turbine that transforms wind energy into electricity. The wind energy generator becomes an increasingly popular form of energy production, as many nations turn away from traditional energy sources and towards renewable sources. From this point of view, something as simple as a sail on a sailboat can be considered a wind energy generator that converts the wind into a ship's dynamics. A windmill directly connected to a water pump or grain processor can also be considered a wind energy generator. This early type of wind energy generator has been used since the 2nd century BC in Persia, and technology has spread around the world in the next few millennia.
However, the wind energy generator would only look at a device that transforms wind energy into electricity. Not in this senseThe more than the facility discovered at the end of the 19th century. At the end of the first decade of the 20th century, nearly 100 electrical generators were connected in the United States, some of which produced up to 25 kW. During the 1920s, the wind energy generator in the United States continued to grow in popularity and acted as a source of small amounts of electricity in rural areas that were not connected to any centralized grid.
with the advent of a more robust national electric network, powered by coal and nuclear power plants, in the United States decreased the use of the wind energy generator. Although it was still used in 60 and 70 years. On farms for things like water pumping, few generators were used to produce electricity. At the beginning of the 80s, it began to change, while the modern wind energy generator appeared and the growing interest in alternative energy sources to oil.
The modern wind energy generator is usually on a horizontal axis, with three blades. GenerateOR changes direction towards the wind, as set by a simple computer. They are designed to capture the strength of the wind most effectively, with the least excess of fluctuations. The modern wind energy generator is usually located at the top of the column of about 200 to 300 feet (60 to 90 meters) and the blades themselves are between 60 and 130 feet (18 to 40 m) long. Most generators have variable speeds, allowing them to use the wind as much as possible, and can be manually turned off if they get too high to ensure that there is no damage to the device.
currently represents wind energy of only about 1% of total energy production in the world or about 95 GW. Some countries have invested more in wind energy, with nations such as Portugal and Spain, which create around 10% of their energy needs by wind, Denmark generates about one fifth of its energy by wind and country like Ireland and Germany generate more than 5% of their energy by wind.