Skip Navigation

New Technologies

News

  • Print
  • Comment
  • | Share

Sail-inspired turbine promises cheaper wind energy

Nébil Zaghdoud

5 November 2012 | EN | FR

The new turbine

The sail-inspired wind turbine may capture more energy

Saphon Energy

[TUNIS] A Tunisian invention that harvests wind energy through adesign inspired by sailboats promises cheaper, more efficient wind energy.

The bladeless wind turbine, the Saphonian, named after the wind divinity that was worshipped by the ancient Carthaginians, also promises to be more environmentally friendly than existing wind turbines that produce noise and kill birds through their blade rotation.

Instead of rotating blades, the Saphonian's sail-shaped body collects the kinetic energy of the wind, Anis Aouini, the Saphonian's inventor, told SciDev.Net.

He explained that the resulting mechanical energy moves pistons which generate hydraulic pressure that can be stored in a hydraulic accumulator or converted into electricity.

"This is not the first bladeless wind turbine, but we thought outside the box: the initial idea came from sails — the only human system that can capture and convert the bulk of the wind's power into mechanical energy," said Aouini.

An average wind turbine captures only 30 to 40 per cent of the wind's kinetic energy, while the Saphonian can capture up to 80 per cent, according to Aouini.

Hassine Labaied, chief executive of Saphon Energy, the start-up energy company established to get the turbine to market, said the Saphonian reduces the aerodynamic and mechanical energy losses associated with rotating-blade turbines.

"Our second generation prototype is 2.3 times more efficient, and costs nearly half the price of its predecessors [conventional wind turbines]. It discards the most expensive components in a traditional wind turbine, which are the blades, hub and gearbox," said Labaied.

Aouini and Labaied patented the technology in Tunisia in September 2010, and received an international patent in March 2012. Saphon Energy is now looking for a partnership with a manufacturer to deploy the technology worldwide.

"We are negotiating with a number of international companies that produce renewable energy technology, and will finalise this by the end of this year," said Labaied. He estimated that it would take up to two years until the commercial product reaches the market.

Ali Kanzari, a renewable energy expert and director-general of Solar Energy Systems, told SciDev.Net that the Saphonian "seems to be a radical and economically viable alternative to bladed turbines". However, he added that "the manufacturing step is important as it will determine how the market will accept it".

"The electricity produced through wind in Tunisia represents five per cent of total electricity production in the country," Ayadi Ben Aissa, former chief executive of the Tunisian Society of Electricity and Gas (STEG), told SciDev.Net.

He said that using the Saphonian technology could produce up to 20 per cent of Tunisia's electricity from wind in the medium term.

See below for a video about Saphonian wind turbine:



Comments (6)

Mike Barnard ( Canada )

5 November 2012

Likely a scam. Deluded principals at best.

1. Can't scale. The conical cross-structure combined with the piston-based energy capture system creates a massively cantilevered weight on a weak joint. Fail.
2. Not backed up by their patent (linked from their website). The device described in their patent isn't the one described in their website.
3. Zero numbers or external validation of claims.
4. Claims of better than Betz Law energy recovery. No one has ever gotten close to Betz Law theoretical limit, never mind two guys with zero wind industry history.
5. Two guys with zero wind industry history or credibility.

I can't believe this thing is still getting press.

omaralhayani ( Yemen )

5 November 2012

Good Nabil

Michael ( Canada )

8 November 2012

And how does it handle high winds?

Iceman ( United States of America )

9 November 2012

Looks like a giant speaker on a stand. Mike Barnard your comments at least gives people a solid pessamistic sense but is there anything you like about the idea?

Tom Wickland ( United States of America )

11 November 2012

Thanks for your insights, Mike.

Reminds me of Philippe Starck's supposedly revolutionary "Revolutionaire" wind turbine of a few years ago. Coverage by the green press was fawning and uncritical.

Same thing happened with the "Honeywell" wind turbine. (Honeywell licensed their name but it was not their product.)

youserseef ( Saudi Arabia )

13 November 2012

I like the brilliant Idea and with the minimum details I have read about it I think It will work, never mind about industry history The inventors already proved their design and invention capabilities.
I think its time for horizontal wind turbine to retire, I did alot of research in the wind turbine and I can't think of a machine worse than horizontal wind :
- Disturb wild life.
- Sound pollution.
- Disturb TV signal.
- More maintenance.
- More loses.
- Less efficiency.
- Terrible visual impact.

Add your comment

This is your network: share your views on any of our articles by adding your comments.

You need to be signed in to post a comment or to email a consenting comment author. Please sign in or sign up.

All comments are subject to approval and we reserve the right to edit comments containing inappropriate/unsuitable language. SciDev.Net holds copyright for all material posted on the website. Please see terms of use for further details.

All SciDev.Net material is free to reproduce providing that the source and author are appropriately credited. For further details see Creative Commons.

Back to News
To the top