Print Email Facebook Twitter The Electrostatic Wind Energy Converter: Electrical performance of a high voltage prototype Title The Electrostatic Wind Energy Converter: Electrical performance of a high voltage prototype Author Djairam, D. Contributor Smit, J.J. (promotor) Faculty Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science Date 2008-12-10 Abstract Wind energy is converted to electrical energy by letting the wind move charged particles against the direction of an electric field. The advantage of this type of conversion is that no rotational movement, which occurs in conventional wind turbines, is required. An electrostatic wind energy converter (EWICON) has been developed. Charged particles have been created using two spraying methods, electrohydrodynamic atomisation and high pressure monodisperse spraying. Using both methods, wind energy has been converted to electric energy and delivered to an electrical load with positive efficiency. Subject wind energyconversionelectrosprayhigh voltagegeneratorconverterelectrostatic To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:e1cfdada-85ea-45c4-b6e4-b798abf5917e ISBN 978-90-8559-482-6 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type doctoral thesis Rights (c) 2008 D. Djairam Files PDF djairam_20081210.pdf 5.01 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:e1cfdada-85ea-45c4-b6e4-b798abf5917e/datastream/OBJ/view