Can a Wind Turbine Improve the Efficiency of a Moving Car?

Click For Summary
Attaching a wind turbine to a moving car to harness wind energy is theoretically possible, but it is impractical and inefficient. The energy extracted from the wind would result in increased drag, requiring more fuel for the car, thus negating any potential energy gains. While some suggest that a turbine could be used for minor tasks like charging devices when stationary, the overall system would not provide a net energy benefit. The concept violates the principles of energy conservation, making it a type 1 perpetual motion machine. Ultimately, the idea lacks economic viability and practicality for enhancing vehicle efficiency.
  • #61
Read the above.

If you take energy from something useful. You LOSE!

Ie it would be more energy efficient to simply use the electricity generated by the engine.

engine > altenator > phone
engine > motion > wind tubine > phone.

It adds more steps the energy has to take when ultimately it comes form the same source.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #62
xxChrisxx said:
Read the above.

If you take energy from something useful. You LOSE!

Ie it would be more energy efficient to simply use the electricity generated by the engine.

engine > altenator > phone
engine > motion > wind tubine > phone.

It adds more steps the energy has to take when ultimately it comes form the same source.

Yup. pr0nChrispr0n is right. It's all coming from the gasoline anyway. Why put more steps in between? You've already got a source of electricity.
 
  • #63
DaveC426913 said:
pr0nChrispr0n

:smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile::smile:
 
  • #64
pronjay said:
OK so the turbine causes drag, but you have the momentum of the car so maybe you would get a slight overall net gain of energy i.e. enough to power a mobile phone...?
Momentum isn't energy.
yeah but you have the momentum of th vehicle so doesn't this more than counteract the drag?
Momentum isn't force either.

Please understand: we aren't saying that the turbine doesn't generate energy, we are just saying that the turbine steals that energy from the car's engine.
 
  • #65
i agree...you can not get something for nothing ...what you can do to improve things is to capture and utilize the high temperatures produced by the IC..both antifreeze in the cooling system and waste exhaust.. this is going to waste and..the drag produced by radiator opening could be reduced/eliminated to up the MPG.
there it is...available energy in the form of heat..going to the atmosphere...convert this and you got the ticket!
 
  • #66
hmmm..."turbine on the exhaust"...
what about perm magnets on the intake turbocharger rotor

"antifreeze in the cooling system and waste exhaust"
big peltier device to change heat transfer to electricity

(from my understanding with an engineer here that worked with peltier devices they will produce electricity from temp transfer, although not as effieient as power into transfer heat)

given as much as most cars sit vs drive, the wind turbine would work good with a "docking station" for the hybred car

just not a good idea on the car at speed

dr
 
  • #67
dr dodge said:
hmmm..."turbine on the exhaust"...
Would cause back-pressure on the exhaust system.
dr dodge said:
what about perm magnets on the intake turbocharger rotor
You're expending energy getting the thing up to speed, then you're going to steal that energy for somewhere else?

You're not thinking critically. You're just pointing at components and asking if it's possible to tap energy from them.

dr dodge said:
given as much as most cars sit vs drive, the wind turbine would work good with a "docking station" for the hybred car
dr
OK, stick one on your roof then. If there's access to the grid (which is why there's a docking station there) then there's no point to attaching a wind turbine at the docking station. Attach it somewhere in the grid that's more efficient for function and just have wired into the grid.

The whole point of what we're talking about is devices on the car when you don't have access to recharging or refueling.
 
  • #68
dr dodge said:
hmmm..."turbine on the exhaust"...
Like a turbocharger...? Or you could use the turbine directly to power a generator.
what about perm magnets on the intake turbocharger rotor
Yes, but it is already an energy recovery device, so you probably don't gain any more by doing this.
"antifreeze in the cooling system and waste exhaust"
If you mean waste heat recovery then yes.
big peltier device to change heat transfer to electricity

(from my understanding with an engineer here that worked with peltier devices they will produce electricity from temp transfer, although not as effieient as power into transfer heat)
Correct.
given as much as most cars sit vs drive, the wind turbine would work good with a "docking station" for the hybred car

just not a good idea on the car at speed

dr
Correct.
 
  • #69
DaveC426913 said:
Would cause back-pressure on the exhaust system.
Yes, but the gain is greater than the loss. Turbochargers do, in fact, improve efficiency for a given power output.
You're expending energy getting the thing up to speed, then you're going to steal that energy for somewhere else?

You're not thinking critically. You're just pointing at components and asking if it's possible to tap energy from them.
A turbocharger is already an energy recovery device - he's just thinking of other ways to use it.
 
  • #70
DaveC426913 said:
Would cause back-pressure on the exhaust system.

You can tune around the loss, exhausts acutally need 'back pressure' to work correctly and allow tuning. A turbine generating electricity is only the same as a turbocharger, in terms of how it affects the exhaust.

On the whole a turbocharger is better than a turbine, because increasing the spcific output of the engine is more useful that lots of electricity generation. From a cost vs outcome perspetive. Making the engine produce the same power at a lower specific fuel consumption is more effective than adding batteries and trying to do a hybrid system.

This is the reason for the current trend in engine downsizing, improved efficiency with no appreaciable power and performance loss. Made especially juicy by variable turbo geometry reducing/eliminating lag problems.

I guess you could add a low pass turbine at the end of the exhaust system, just to try to steal that last bit for electiricty generation.
 
  • #71
The_Thinker said:
If supposing we were to add a wind turbine connected to a generator to a moving car, would we be able to get the air flowing around the car to turn the turbine and therefore gain some energy? If it is possible, is it economical? if it is, is it practical? would there be a loss? would there be any gain in overall efficiency??

A friend of mine wants to do this project for collage and wants to implement this idea... I just want to know if it is practical or not...

So... what do you guys think?
i don't think it ia possible because there are factors to be considered
1. the place to place the turbine
2.the efficiency of converting the energy from the wind turbine for the car's use
 
  • #72
i think it is possible. a paddlewheel behind the car in its wake can extract the energy. it will decrease the drag coefficient of the car aswell.
 
  • #73
lazypast said:
i think it is possible. a paddlewheel behind the car in its wake can extract the energy. it will decrease the drag coefficient of the car aswell.

<smacks forehead>...you just had 5 pages of explaining why you can't do this. Did you read any previous posts?
 
  • #74
AYANTAYO said:
i don't think it ia possible because there are factors to be considered
1. the place to place the turbine
2.the efficiency of converting the energy from the wind turbine for the car's use

Ditto for you. I really don't understand why anyone is posting what they *think* when you all have been given sufficient fact as to why this will not work. One should avoid "I think" or "I believe" when making engineering statements. Either it is or it isnt. This thread has probably reached the point of diminishing returns.
 
Last edited:
  • #75
To think I just read 5 pages of this...

To put it in complete layman's terms. Hold your hand out the window of a moving car. Then hold your hand out the window while holding a fan. The drag caused by the fan pushes your hand back harder now. If you have a 100% efficient wind turbine and a 100% efficient car engine you get all the drag added back as energy, but why? It would be easier to just directly couple the car engine to a generator, and that assumes everything is 100% efficient which is impossible. There is no way you can win.

If you decide to reduce drag and place a turbine in it's place then it's the same result. 10Kw required to keep the car at highway speeds, you reduce the drag to save 3kw then add a turbine that generates 1kw at 30% efficiency. Yup you win it now takes 10 kw to drive the car minus the 1kw you now generate, so 9kw. But, if you can reduce power required by 3kw then why add the generator? You can now drive at highway speeds on 7kw vice 10.

Somebody lock this thread please.
 
  • #76
chayced said:
To think I just read 5 pages of this...

To put it in complete layman's terms. Hold your hand out the window of a moving car. Then hold your hand out the window while holding a fan. The drag caused by the fan pushes your hand back harder now. If you have a 100% efficient wind turbine and a 100% efficient car engine you get all the drag added back as energy, but why? It would be easier to just directly couple the car engine to a generator, and that assumes everything is 100% efficient which is impossible. There is no way you can win.

If you decide to reduce drag and place a turbine in it's place then it's the same result. 10Kw required to keep the car at highway speeds, you reduce the drag to save 3kw then add a turbine that generates 1kw at 30% efficiency. Yup you win it now takes 10 kw to drive the car minus the 1kw you now generate, so 9kw. But, if you can reduce power required by 3kw then why add the generator? You can now drive at highway speeds on 7kw vice 10.

Somebody lock this thread please.

I have no idea where or what these "made up" power values come from.
 
  • #77
It was clearly a hypothetical example.
 
  • #78
xxChrisxx said:
It was clearly a hypothetical example.

The example doesn't even make any sense, and neither do the numbers. A wind turbine at the back of the car will promote flow separation. You cannot reduce the drag and then add a wind turbine. This is a fallacious line of argument.
 
  • #79
Cyrus said:
I have no idea where or what these "made up" power values come from.

Just hypothetical. It really doesn't matter because any numbers you put in will give you the same result. I was just illustrating a point.

Also I don't see where my point gets confusing. Anything you do to generate electricity adds drag. If you reduce drag to add drag then you lose from the inefficiencies of your generator. Why not just reduce the drag in the first place if you already have this ability.
 
Last edited:
  • #80
Cyrus said:
The example doesn't even make any sense, and neither do the numbers. A wind turbine at the back of the car will promote flow separation. You cannot reduce the drag and then add a wind turbine. This is a fallacious line of argument.

It doesn't matter.

It illustrated the point that it adds another layer on efficiency to factor in (the numbers used not being mega accurate is irrelevent). It also demonstrated the extra steps the energy takes from engine to motion.

In the case above even though you think you are winning as you are recovering 1kw from the original 10. You still lose as you could only be using 7.It's a case of spending a pound to save a penny.
 
Last edited:
  • #81
Precisely.
 
  • #82
The_Thinker said:
If supposing we were to add a wind turbine connected to a generator to a moving car, would we be able to get the air flowing around the car to turn the turbine and therefore gain some energy? If it is possible, is it economical? if it is, is it practical? would there be a loss? would there be any gain in overall efficiency??

A friend of mine wants to do this project for collage and wants to implement this idea... I just want to know if it is practical or not...

So... what do you guys think?
Of course it is possible to add a wind turbine. and this would produce energy in the form of electricity. Not practical or economic...It would take MORE gasoline to do this. anytime you add drag you need at add gas to overcome the drag. you can not get something for nothing. the fact you are adding drag is proven by wind tunnel drag tests. period..case closed.
now what you can do is to recover waste HEAT produced by the internal COMBUSTION engine. combustion being the key here.
 
  • #83
Perhaps if we build a large, wooden Badger...
 
  • #84
This thread has run its course.

[Hey Fred, congrats, you've invented a new counterpart to Goodwin's law...we'll call it the Monty Python law. It states: "As an online engineering discussion grows longer, the probability of a reference to Monty Python approaches 1."]
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 26 ·
Replies
26
Views
13K
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
5K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
5K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
5K