2017
DOI: 10.1063/1.4968279
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Wind energy potential assessment to estimate performance of selected wind turbine in northern coastal region of Semarang-Indonesia

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Cited by 20 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This height is uncommon in North America and rare in Europe, although it is slightly more common in Asia and the rest of the world [62]. Premono et al presented turbines with hub height from 30.5 to 75 m in their analysis of wind energy potential assessment on the northern coast of central Java, Indonesia [63], and Vasel-Be-Hagh and Archer calculated 5.4% more power when rows of tall (100 m) and short (57.5 m) wind turbines are alternated [64]. Table 4 presents the average air density calculated with Eqs.…”
Section: Wind Power Densitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This height is uncommon in North America and rare in Europe, although it is slightly more common in Asia and the rest of the world [62]. Premono et al presented turbines with hub height from 30.5 to 75 m in their analysis of wind energy potential assessment on the northern coast of central Java, Indonesia [63], and Vasel-Be-Hagh and Archer calculated 5.4% more power when rows of tall (100 m) and short (57.5 m) wind turbines are alternated [64]. Table 4 presents the average air density calculated with Eqs.…”
Section: Wind Power Densitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the minimum cut-in wind speed for viable utilization, in water pumping, have been put at 2.2 ms -1 , then only 54.8% of the wind speed frequency will be useful. So, no wind turbine will operate at speed lower than 2.2 ms -1 as it cut-in speed (Premono et al, 2017). The frequency distribution also shows that there is no zero wind speed which implies that there is no calmness throughout the entire year in Minna.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Suitable wind turbines were selected in the simulations in this study. The results showed that the capacity coefficient of these simulated turbines was 29.79% and their production capacity was 261 MWh/year (Premono et al, 2017). The corresponding value for Ardabil was from 3.68 to 4.55 m/s, with an average of 4.16 m/s.…”
Section: Case Study Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…It was concluded that to harvest wind power into electricity, wind turbines capable of operating in low wind speeds needed to be installed and used in this area (Okeniyi et al, 2015). Premono, Tjahjana, and Hadi (2017) conducted a statistical investigation of wind speed characteristics and measured wind speed potentials of the northern coast of Semarang in Java, Indonesia. The annual wind data was gathered from weather stations at a height of ten meters.…”
Section: Case Study Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%