Latest News About Vertical Axis Wind Turbine

Updated 2026-04-15 04:01

Vertical axis wind turbines (VAWTs) are gaining attention for their potential advantages over traditional horizontal-axis models, including omnidirectional wind capture and reduced wake turbulence in arrays. Recent research highlights innovations like paired H-shape Darrieus VAWTs that boost mutual performance by up to 15% when closely spaced.[1][6]

Key Developments

Oxford Brookes University simulations show VAWT farms could pack turbines tighter without efficiency losses from turbulence, unlike HAWTs where downstream output drops up to 40%. A Flinders University prototype (6kW) nears field trials south of Adelaide, backed by funding for urban and offshore viability. Swiss researchers optimized VAWT efficiency with tweaks, noting quieter operation and bird safety.[3][5][1]

Market Trends

The VAWT market is projected to grow from $12.9 billion in 2022 to $17.7 billion by 2032, driven by urban energy needs and compact designs. Machine learning has enabled 200% efficiency gains and 77% vibration cuts via optimal blade pitching.[6][7]

Design Innovations

Tilting vertical-axis concepts with counter-rotating blades minimize torque and allow denser offshore farms, potentially doubling energy output. Canadian engineering advances position VAWTs for broader renewable integration.[8][9]

Sources

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Swiss researchers boost efficiency of vertical axis wind ...

Швейцарский национальный научный фонд венчурный фонд: Вертикальные ветряные турбины из Швейцарии смогут производить больше электроэнергии

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