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    Efficiency improvement of vertical axis wind turbines with an upstream deflector.

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    The suitability of using an upstream deflector to improve the efficiency of a vertical axis wind turbine is presented in this study. A two-dimensional vertical axis wind turbine (VAWT) was modelled and simulated using ANSYS Fluent 14.0 computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software to solve the k-epsilon (RNG) turbulence model. Firstly, the open rotor design was optimised by varying orientation and pitch angle, prior to analysing the effect increasing wind speed had on the turbine performance. A maximum efficiency of 19.101% was achieved and was used as the open rotor design. A series of curved upstream deflectors were then evaluated in terms of efficiency improvements against the original open rotor design. Installation of the deflector resulted in a redirection of the fluid flow from the returning turbine blade, therefore reducing the negative torque induced on the system. Additionally, deflector width angles of 45o and 36o were found to improve the turbine performance by 1.266%. Finally, a scale model of the wind turbine was constructed and experimentally tested using a wind tunnel. No correlation between the CFD and experimental results was found due to variations in the wind speed tested by both methods. However, the VAWT design operated at a reasonably efficient level during the experimental testing, even under suboptimal conditions
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