Induction hardening of wind energy plants and components

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article number
00541_2009_01_05
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Constantly rising oil prices, global warming, alternative energies - buzzwords which we hear almost every day. Even when this excess of buzzwords already leads to saturation, the energy-hungry world cannot commit itself to seek new alternative and regenerative energy sources. In addition to solar and water energy, wind energy is probably the most significant current energy source. It is clean, inexpensive and constant. But how can this inexhaustible energy be "harvested"? The present article should illuminate some partial aspects of this question and thereby provide a glimpse of the technology of modern windmills. The goal here is to answer the question: What does wind energy have to do with induction hardening?
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Authors Hansjürg Stiele/Helmut Schulte
Publishing Date 1 Jan 2009
Format PDF
Zeitschrift heat processing - Issue 01 2009
Publisher Vulkan-Verlag GmbH
Language English
Pages 6
Title Induction hardening of wind energy plants and components
Description Constantly rising oil prices, global warming, alternative energies - buzzwords which we hear almost every day. Even when this excess of buzzwords already leads to saturation, the energy-hungry world cannot commit itself to seek new alternative and regenerative energy sources. In addition to solar and water energy, wind energy is probably the most significant current energy source. It is clean, inexpensive and constant. But how can this inexhaustible energy be "harvested"? The present article should illuminate some partial aspects of this question and thereby provide a glimpse of the technology of modern windmills. The goal here is to answer the question: What does wind energy have to do with induction hardening?
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