September 18, 2023
By Jamie Seidel
A new rotation for turbine blades
Credit: Andrew Merry/Getty Images.
Extreme conditions need extreme solutions. That’s why the enormous
blades driving our wind turbines are marvels of modern technology. But
they aren’t immune to entropy. So what happens when they wear out?
According to Dr Ali Hadigheh of the University of Sydney’s School of
Civil Engineering, modern advanced composite materials answer a
pressing need.
“Wind turbines have blades of anywhere between
30m and 100m in length. These must be strong. They must be
lightweight. And steel and aluminium can’t do both,” Hadigheh told Cosmos.
“Carbon fibre composites are considered a ‘wonder’ material – they are
durable, resistant to weathering and highly versatile – so much so
that their use is projected to increase by at least 60% in the next
decade alone.”
Smaller blades are generally made of fibreglass, while the largest use
carbon fibre. Both rely on the inherent strength of resins holding
long fibres woven in alignment with the applied forces, but they’re
not invulnerable.
Ultraviolet light is a challenge, though resistant coatings have
reduced that problem. Then, there are lightning strikes and the
rapidly shifting stresses associated with storms.
“Mostly, they go through a lot of cycles,” Hadigheh explains. “They
are constantly turning. So, just as you see cracks and dings in a car
after a few years, turbine blades also experience wear and tear.”
Fibre composites are as strong as they are because of their finely
tuned construction. But the constant stress the blades must endure can
turn a minor crack into a structural failure.
“If you put one of these composites indoors with minimal stress loads,
they’ll last centuries. But the constant cycling of stress loadings
causes separation between fibre and epoxy.”
A fibre can snap. That tiny crack can let in rain. In turn, that
causes the crack to enlarge and the larger crack can trigger more
fibres around it to snap.
“That’s why these blades have specific service lives, a point at which
you know you will need to replace them. And that’s a huge task,”
Hadigheh says.
The Clean Energy Council released its “Winding
Up” wind
turbine recycling report in May. It found a
turbine has a design life of about 25 years. And about 600 turbines
across Australia are now more than 15 years old.
Globally, it’s been estimated that some 500,000
tonnes of carbon and glass fibre waste will be produced by
the renewable energy sector by 2030.
Turbine blades aren’t the only problem. Aircraft, mobile phones, road
vehicles, boats – even utility poles – now use these durable materials
regularly. That durability is a problem. It means most waste
composites are currently burnt or buried.
So, the race is on to find ways to recover as much as possible, as
cheaply as possible.
Carbon and glass fibres must be separated from the epoxy resin
encasing them, then they must be sifted, sorted and realigned. And it
must be done in an environmentally friendly way.
“From the earliest stage, we looked at different recycling pathways,
which method would give us better performance in terms of the cost
return as well as reduction in CO2 emissions,” says Hadigheh.
A study by
Hadigheh and his former PhD student Dr Yaning Wei found much of the
infrastructure needed to do the job is already in place. And the most
significant challenge – realigning the retrieved fibres – now has a
patented solution.
“We use very, very weak acids and pyrolysis (high-temperature
decomposition without oxygen),” he explains. “These methods lead to
substantially lower CO2 emissions than landfill and incineration.”
Thermo-chemical processing is an industrial technique used around the
country.
“All the equipment is there. The technology is there. And we have the
knowledge here at UTC. Now we just need some interest from the
industry to invest in the configuration and optimisation needed to
incorporate this process into their workflow.”
He says that using weak acids to break down the resins containing
glass and carbon fibre helps maximise the length of the retrieved
fibres. And pyrolysis is achieved at the relatively low temperature of
420⁰C. “So that reduces the energy input to the system, so it saves
both on cost and CO2 emissions,” he adds.
The decomposed resin produces gases that can fuel the pyrolysis
process (a feedback loop the industry already exploits). Other
byproducts include oils that can be used in other products, such as
asphalt, and biochar, which can be used in concrete.
“Nothing will be lost,” says Hadigheh. “You have to make it
cost-effective to get as much return from your investment as
possible.”
The clean fibres will be too short to produce the extreme strength
needed for replacement turbine blades. But Hadigheh says they can be
used to make components at least as strong as steel – at a fraction of
its weight.
“Once recycled, the fibres are like hairs piled on the ground at a
hairdresser. They are tangled, random, out of form. And it’s hard to
separate them – they’re one-tenth the thickness of a human hair.”
They’re also brittle and too much handling will break the fibres into
even shorter lengths. So keeping them as long as possible to be woven
into new structural matting is imperative.
“We developed a patent for
that,” says Hadigheh. “We can align these recycled fibres in any
direction we want.”
The fibres are picked up by water and carried through different
channels. Hydrodynamic forces align them before being deposited on a
rolling mesh. The repurposed fibres are left behind in the desired
precise pattern as the water drains away.
“We did tests on these samples,” he says. “The tensile strength for
virgin carbon-fibre composite is about 1,300 megapascals. Randomly
aligned recycled short fibres can achieve less than 100 Mpa. But
aligned short fibres get up to about 450 Mpa – about that of steel or
aluminium, but in a much lighter form.
“That means that if you’re already using steel or aluminium, you can
replace it with this much lighter product. And it’s recycled.”
The team is examining how the filaments could be applied in different
ways, such as through 3D printing or as a strengthening agent for
concrete.
“It could also replace the steel reinforcement inside concrete,” he
says. “They are corrosion resistant. So you could reduce the risk of
corrosion in something like a bridge in a coastal area, for example.”
Dr Hadigheh says the next step is to commercialise the process.
“While awareness of everyday consumer recycling is increasing and
plastic waste is in the spotlight, Australia must urgently consider
wide-scale recycling of new generation construction materials before
they mount up as another waste problem and are put into the ‘too hard
basket’,” he concludes.
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