Uncovering The Genius of Fibonnaci Turbines

2024 ж. 27 Сәу.
501 538 Рет қаралды

If you enjoyed this video, you're going to love the interactive courses from Brilliant! Use my link at brilliant.org/ziroth/ for 30 days FREE and 20% off for the first 200 subscribers!
In this video we look into the influence of the Fibonacci sequence and the Golden Ratio in the design and efficiency of wind and hydro turbines. Join us as we uncover how these mathematical concepts, deeply rooted in nature, are revolutionizing renewable energy technology.
🔗 Relevant Links:
Fibonacci and the Golden Ratio:
plus.maths.org/content/myths-...
• The Golden Ratio: Is I...
Turbine 1:
www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/12/14/...
Turbine 2:
www.sciencedirect.com/science...
Turbine 3:
www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/7/12/7893
thearchimedes.com/
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
1:07 Fibonacci & The Golden Ratio
5:12 Myths and Legends
8:28 Optimising Vertical Turbines
10:03 The Truth of Nature
11:31 Applications from Water to Wind
#engineering #breakthrough #turbines #goldenratio

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  • If you enjoyed this video, you're going to love the interactive courses from Brilliant! Use my link at brilliant.org/ziroth/ for 30 days FREE and 20% off for the first 200 subscribers! Do you know of any other real places the Fibonacci sequence appears?

    @ZirothTech@ZirothTech2 ай бұрын
    • Could you make some In Depth Study over Magnetic Recirculation of Ions as Thrusters for Dirigibles as the ones from LokeedMartin or Flying Wales. Taking in consideration that Constant Recirculation of Condensed Atmosphere Humidity could generate much more Passive Ions Production from Water Molecular Charge Interactions with Silver Particles. Basically the more Electricity the more Ions, the more Humidity the more Ions, the both of them Recirculation thanks to Magnetic Separation (Iron Nitride) would Build Up Ions which would be Subsequently Accelerated by Electrical Current Generating Even More Active Ions Thrust... It could becoming An Efficient Low Cost Propulsion for Low Atmosphere Commercial/Defensive/Scientific Dirigibles... [I think Plasma Channel Made already a Video upon that... You should call him and Make a Collabs... He Seems a Fairly Nicely Swaying Guy... He have Good Vibes over New Technologies Research & Development]

      @antoniopacelli@antoniopacelli2 ай бұрын
    • conventional wind turbines have a lot of drawbacks (noise pollution, threatening endangered species like bald eagles and owls, toxic materials, landfill waste) and are only being implemented successfully in areas that have less severe weather and more wind. An Archimedes (or logarithmic) turbine would be more efficient, last longer, and cause less damage to the environment, It's an idea worth investing in.

      @artcurious807@artcurious8072 ай бұрын
    • ​@@artcurious807 I also hate Regular Turbines, but you need a Really Fucked Up Howl or Bald Eagle for Endangering themselves with Blades as Big as Palaces Moving... Theirs Little Big Eyes can See a Rat even from Miles Away... They should be using them for Closing the Rat Lines from WWII, not Using them as Expedient for not Making Turbine Technology Progress... There will be always something else for Carbon Investments... We don't have to Fear Change.. Is The 'Inhumane Status Quo' which have Feared Us...

      @antoniopacelli@antoniopacelli2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@artcurious807⚠️ God has said in the Quran: 🔵 { O mankind, worship your Lord, who created you and those before you, that you may become righteous - ( 2:21 ) 🔴 [He] who made for you the earth a bed [spread out] and the sky a ceiling and sent down from the sky, rain and brought forth thereby fruits as provision for you. So do not attribute to Allah equals while you know [that there is nothing similar to Him]. ( 2:22 ) 🔵 And if you are in doubt about what We have sent down upon Our Servant [Muhammad], then produce a surah the like thereof and call upon your witnesses other than Allah, if you should be truthful. ( 2:23 ) 🔴 But if you do not - and you will never be able to - then fear the Fire, whose fuel is men and stones, prepared for the disbelievers.( 2:24 ) 🔵 And give good tidings to those who believe and do righteous deeds that they will have gardens [in Paradise] beneath which rivers flow. Whenever they are provided with a provision of fruit therefrom, they will say, "This is what we were provided with before." And it is given to them in likeness. And they will have therein purified spouses, and they will abide therein eternally. ( 2:25 ) ⚠️ Quran

      @1islam1@1islam12 ай бұрын
    • Wonderfully explained, great comparisons. 👍🏿

      @lourias@lourias2 ай бұрын
  • Why does the thumbnail say 145% efficiency? I hate when people lie in their advertising. Unlike and unsubscribed.

    @danbanowetz@danbanowetz2 ай бұрын
    • I second this

      @morsecodeisawalrus3444@morsecodeisawalrus34442 ай бұрын
    • yup. hate clickbaits

      @northrocks@northrocks2 ай бұрын
    • I agree - morally. But it got me to watch it. Advertising sells and as a design (advertising) professional who hates lies, I must admit that sometimes a sporty surface gets the edge.

      @tymcat@tymcat2 ай бұрын
    • Me too. Hate it.

      @gunnaralv@gunnaralv2 ай бұрын
    • Do they mean 145% of a regular wind turbine then its plausible. But getting 145% of the actual wind energy (as the clickbait implies). Is just plain stupid.

      @Greyzonecompliant@Greyzonecompliant2 ай бұрын
  • The most important metric of a wind turbine is the levelized cost of energy (LCOE). This metric allows you to compare all forms of energy generation in terms of total energy return during the lifetime of operation per investment dollar spent.

    @bobbob-gg4eo@bobbob-gg4eo2 ай бұрын
    • Not at all. You fx also has to add the local climate by temperaure and dirty air, where there are many buildings. That give people a lot of bills, they are not 100% and also needs for expensive beds.

      @jensholm5759@jensholm57592 ай бұрын
    • @@jensholm5759 that is all accounted for when calculating LCOE. However, one Interesting thing that LCOE doesn't account for that I am interested in when designing my turbines is the cradle to grave environmental impact of mining, manufacturing, assembling, transporting, installing, operating, and decommissioning each turbine. It's best to keep these in mind during the design phase because ultimately you want to minimize the total emissions and negative environmental impacts involved.

      @bobbob-gg4eo@bobbob-gg4eo2 ай бұрын
    • lets for a moment ignore the fact that wind turbines do affect the eco system for birds and other wildlife... most wind turbines do advertise a life span of 25yrs (which is true in a controlled environment) but we're almost at the end of some of these wind turbine government contracts and the true cost comes out, on avg these wind turbines last 1.5yrs- 2yrs on avg before needing to be replaced and the efficiency actually drops to less than 33% within the 1st 3mts of operation (on avg every 8-10mts the blades is replaced).. this is all thanks to the blades deteriorating much faster than expected, you can use the strongest materials known to man and this would still happen.. the other factors is the weather pattern and storms, in the real world when storms hit wind turbines they need to be replaced, even if you can't see the damage there is micro cracks all over the blades and 90% of the time the motor/ generator is damaged.. now if you think burying nuclear waste was a problem well getting rid of the glass fiber blades is a much MUCH bigger problem (in terms of space requirements) and no they don't biodegrade... as a comparison wind energy takes more ppl and more jobs is created than nuclear energy BUT because there is over 100times more ppl required to make the same power so that factor alone makes wind power more expensive than nuclear energy....

      @dunhillsupramk3@dunhillsupramk32 ай бұрын
    • @@dunhillsupramk3 I'm interested in learning more. Can you cite your sources?

      @bobbob-gg4eo@bobbob-gg4eo2 ай бұрын
    • Very interesting.Takes me back to June& July 2000 when I was part of a group of teachers that visited the USA to learn new methods of teaching Science, Maths and Technology.That is where I first learnt about Fibonacci.VERY VERY interesting that nature has the aswers to many of our questions about our lived world.

      @henryrossouw930@henryrossouw9302 ай бұрын
  • 9:14 The green thing is NOT a savonius turbine. A savonius has to have a gap between the halves through which the wind can flow to the other half that runs towards the wind. If the gap is missing it is a pure resistance runner like for example an anemometer.

    @peter2327@peter23272 ай бұрын
    • Minor quibble. The version with no gap is included in the drawings of many embodiments of the concept revealed in his patent.

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
    • Ahhemmmm. not a "savonius turbine", its a "Savonius ROTOR"

      @violettownmicroenterprises1528@violettownmicroenterprises1528Ай бұрын
    • ​@@dennisbecraft1303 In his patent document of 1926 in Austria, Savonius included drawings of a version without a gap as well as a dozen of versions with a gap. He explicitely explained in the text that the gap significantly enhances the performance of the rotor. In his patent document of 1930 in Germany a specific layout of the gap is the essential feature of his patent claim.

      @FranzN57@FranzN5726 күн бұрын
    • @@FranzN57 Why lecture me? I'm not the one who said it must have the gap to be a savonius.

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft130326 күн бұрын
  • To produce those spirals, a living thing's cells need to be able to produce a consistent angles of an irrational rotation. Phi happens to be a good ratio for producing dense packing on a growing surface area. Keep in mind, though, dense packing on a growing surface area ALMOST ALWAYS produces a spiral of some kind if it's not a flat surface.

    @seeranos@seeranos2 ай бұрын
    • It doesn't have to replicate the exact number. It just has to get close enough to work. Your computer doesn't account for the whole irrational sequence when it draws a spiral on the screen. The plants don't have to either.

      @Elrog3@Elrog32 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Elrog3excuse me, you don't need the perfect 1 to 1 distance between each point of a sphere to call it a sphere, you need to only get juuuust close enough, yet a perfect sphere produces infinite god damn pressure, as it has infinitely small curvature.

      @shawermus@shawermus2 ай бұрын
    • @@shawermus "a perfect sphere produces infinite god damn pressure" - This is nonsense rambling.

      @Elrog3@Elrog32 ай бұрын
    • @@Elrog3 It is, but it's one of those "sounds right" factoids. Rates high on the "truthiness" scale. I'm not far enough into the quantum physics realm to fully explain any of this, but immediately you can understand where it's wrong by knowing that your eyes (and hands, etc.) really do deceive you. It's all an abstraction. You can't infinitely zoom into a sphere, because as you near the atomic scale, the sphere becomes a collection of atoms which definitely do not form infinitely small curvatures because they aren't even touching each other.

      @Varadiio@Varadiio2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Elrog3not for me ... I am perfectionist

      @speed999-uj5kr@speed999-uj5kr2 ай бұрын
  • 9:09 you are welcome for that 1second of footage from my backyard.

    @aurigo_tech@aurigo_tech2 ай бұрын
    • Haha

      @kylexrex@kylexrex2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for your video contribution. Wind energy paired with solar could essential help all single family home to be less grid dependant.

      @Friendly_Gamer_Mom@Friendly_Gamer_Mom2 ай бұрын
    • Sorry the credit wasn't clear in the corner - It's an automatic layer and I should have changed the colour of!

      @ZirothTech@ZirothTech2 ай бұрын
    • @@Friendly_Gamer_Mom True, wind and solar would complement each other really well on the home, solar is effective in summer weather whereas winds is effective in winter weather as well as nighttimes and at pretty much any time of the year, which if I recall, wind is stronger in winter compared to summer and is also a little stronger at nighttime when solar doesn't generate anything. The other potential advantage of having both, by having a more consistent energy being generated, you'll need less of a buffer when it comes to how many batteries you need. But we'll have to see, we've heard so many promising ideas for wind power in urban areas but most just don't work that well, but in recent times, we are seeing a lot more creative ideas on the table, so if any of them can generate some meaningful energy, be cheap enough to buy, it could become a game changer.

      @paul1979uk2000@paul1979uk2000Ай бұрын
  • As the entire surface of the front view of the spinning blades is solid material. Not transparent looking like the gaps between spinning straight blades. Birds might not try to fly through the "danger zone" as they will see the solid metal / plastic body of the turbine as they approach from the front or back. So perhaps fly around it. ☠

    @ivanallen4262@ivanallen42622 ай бұрын
    • This is also why it doesn't work--- it's unstable to destructive winds and it's not as efficient as passing the air through to harvest energy.

      @annaclarafenyo8185@annaclarafenyo81852 ай бұрын
    • @@annaclarafenyo8185 another trick to get some money from investors who have no clue what they are looking at. I can bet that turbine can not even get close to the efficiency of a medieval windmill,not to mention modern eolics......Why i claim this? Because it have a huge drag and friction with very little active surface . Some people don't realise that a turbine is moved by the inertia of the mass of the air passing thru it. Reason why the eolics have only 3 blades with a lot of space between,having more blades would just swirl the air and increase the drag and the mass of the turbine,lowering efficiency.

      @draculakickyourass@draculakickyourass2 ай бұрын
    • @@annaclarafenyo8185 True. They can't brake them in destructive winds. The traditional blades can turn on their axes to capture less wind.

      @duudsuufd@duudsuufd2 ай бұрын
  • I finally understand the Fibonucci set, thankyou, great video.

    @bryanoneill5047@bryanoneill50472 ай бұрын
  • I think the most important thing is Cost Per Watt, across all scales. So im wondering whats is the cost of manufacturing vs relative production improvement compared to traditional turbines. Beautiful video

    @fire17102@fire171022 ай бұрын
    • Even more important is cost per Wh (or kWh, MWh, etc).

      @SolarWebsite@SolarWebsite2 ай бұрын
    • @@SolarWebsite yea that's what I meant, can my original comment be interpreted in any other way? He touched on this at the very end, I guess if you know the flat geometry you can bend sheets to this shape, but will they hold the shape in fast winds? I need to see a home made version of this

      @fire17102@fire171022 ай бұрын
    • The most important metric of a wind turbine is LCOE

      @bobbob-gg4eo@bobbob-gg4eo2 ай бұрын
    • @@fire17102 Uhm, well, you did say watt...

      @SolarWebsite@SolarWebsite2 ай бұрын
    • @@fire17102 Actually your original statement is perfectly valid and the industry standard. Because reneable energy has a high upfront instalation cost and almost no marginal cost the primary investment choice is made on a metric of cost per unit of generating capacity aka (dollars per watt) which is driven by manufacturing and instalation of the equipment. In the end more detailed calculations are needed to determine profitability but by then many other non-technical factors like interest rates, tax incentives etc are also involved.

      @kennethferland5579@kennethferland55792 ай бұрын
  • the 145% efficiency has triggered my senses :D

    @daniele.ronzulli912@daniele.ronzulli9122 ай бұрын
    • Anyone trying to claim that anything has over-unity efficiency is , 1) in possession of the universe's single exception to the Second Law of Thermodynamics; 2) is ignorant of simple physics; or, 3) is a grifting bullshit artist. Usually some combination of #2 and #3.

      @silverhammer7779@silverhammer77792 ай бұрын
    • 145% efficiency is total garbage and they've completely dumped all credibility.

      @Skank_and_Gutterboy@Skank_and_Gutterboy2 ай бұрын
  • Seems to me that the mountings they are using are sub-optimal, the wishbone bracket should be horizontal with a pair of rotors with opposite spin thus canceling the gyroscopic effect which would inhibit turning into the wind. This pair assembly then sits on a single pivot point where the two wishbones meet (like to back to back 'C' shapes) which is at the same height as the centerline of the spirals, which means far less torque force is needed to rotate it. This could even be expanded to a quad system all pivoting on one point. The reason you need to do this is that the main mast of a wind turbine is costly, so maximizing the amount of air captured by it is critical for cost effective deployments.

    @kennethferland5579@kennethferland55792 ай бұрын
    • Ignoring efficiency of scale & costs of complexity, adjacency interactions impeding ambient airflow etc., aren't you?

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
    • @@dennisbecraft1303 I would guess that having two counter rotating gear linked turbines in parallel with small clearance would increase efficiency thanks to high pressure zone forming in middle creating additional lift in direction of rotations.

      @skyrask1948@skyrask19482 ай бұрын
    • @@skyrask1948 Possibly, if it worked something like an augmenter shroud. I'm guessing too, but I was imagining the resulting higher pressure spot wouldn't be ideal because it's asymmetrical, like not having the rotor aimed directly into the wind. Established theory only gets you so far, then you have to test your own hunches empirically. A 15% improvement on a very old drag design is impressive.

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
    • I don't know if placing many of these so close is a good idea. In conventional wind turbines a lot of care goes into placing them in a way that minimizes their effect on each other. I'd assume that if you placed two spirals right next to each other, the effect of the air being diverted to the side would be reduced, and the uneven load throughout one cycle would cause more significant material fatigue. Plus, if the rotation of the turbine was hindering it turning to the wind, you could just place the turbine further back, or add fins behind it, like you see in some old-school water pump wind turbines.

      @planterion7969@planterion79692 ай бұрын
  • I never understood the golden ratio until now. Thank you for explaining it so well!

    @TIMMEH19991@TIMMEH199912 ай бұрын
  • ‘Crowd-resourcing sun-flowers’ - v. good!

    @markhughes7927@markhughes79272 ай бұрын
  • Interesting. In my opinion, you explain things in a clear and engaging manner.

    @semaJ455@semaJ4552 ай бұрын
  • I am a Bharatiya, I am very thankful you mentioned where the fibinaci number actually came from, much appreciated

    @dhaval1489@dhaval14892 ай бұрын
    • It was invented by Mr Fibonacci

      @Fabian3331234333@Fabian33312343332 ай бұрын
    • Nope man it was invented by indian mathematien

      @HansMulliah@HansMulliah2 ай бұрын
    • Indian claim everything indian. I don't trust it at this point

      @user-cj6sd6wt8j@user-cj6sd6wt8j2 ай бұрын
    • Now you can die in peace..

      @LimLux@LimLux2 ай бұрын
    • what the hell is bharatiya

      @jake-jm8se@jake-jm8se2 ай бұрын
  • Just loved this practical explanation of wind turbines and its roots in history, and nature of the ferbinacci, or golden ratio's difference against the archimedes spiral. Am hoping to make some of these for electric generating project.

    @visnuexe@visnuexe2 ай бұрын
    • Archimedes spiral is MUCH more efficient.

      @protoborg@protoborg2 ай бұрын
  • As a design engineer who also dabbles in involute gear tooth profiles with Inventor AutoDesk's equation line, I was elated to hear about all the various ratios and the history of how they came to be derived. What an exceptional video; you have my subscription. 👏

    @timothysands5537@timothysands5537Ай бұрын
  • He wasn’t joking when it literally appears everywhere. Wonderful video ziroth

    @luvkilo@luvkilo2 ай бұрын
    • Its been in film since at least 1939, its the Yellow Brick Road from Oz

      @Syncrotron9001@Syncrotron90012 ай бұрын
  • I missed the mentions of Pax Scientific who are making mixers based on the golden spiral like the Lilly Impeller. They have some turbine designs as well.

    @VictorY-mu6zp@VictorY-mu6zp2 ай бұрын
  • This was really one of the best researched and reported videos in a while.. long on info, short on channel begging. Well done

    @The-KP@The-KP2 ай бұрын
    • that intro was tooo long

      @zangetsu6638@zangetsu66382 ай бұрын
  • Loving the history/mythology crossover/backstory. Another great video!

    @sbdruitt@sbdruitt2 ай бұрын
  • If you're into spirals, check out the Japanese martial art Aikido. Many spirals in nature are the natural and stable resolution of dynamic and opposite forces confronting each other. Such as when a high pressure zone hits a low pressure zone and a tornado forms as a result. Aikido forms dynamic spirals by actively receiving their opponents attack. In a sense the Aikidoka is the low pressure zone to their opponent's high pressure zone. A predictable spiral forms and the Aikidoka is trained to almost ride the vortex of the spiral to use the clash as a way to throw or pin their opponent.

    @beansnrice321@beansnrice3212 ай бұрын
    • Aikido has proven to be a farse in real life application

      @jesseflores9087@jesseflores90872 ай бұрын
    • That's pretty cool

      @Nebukanezzer@Nebukanezzer2 ай бұрын
    • When I read "Japanese" I thought you were about to troll everyone by recommending the Japanese horror manga about spirals, Uzumaki XD

      @BlueAmpharos@BlueAmpharos2 ай бұрын
    • The spirals can also be seen in Aikido, in Steven Seagal's spiraling out of control weight gain. His spiraling out of control ego. As well as his spiraling toilet full of schit, farcical arts demo's.

      @wingnutbert9685@wingnutbert96852 ай бұрын
    • but aikido is not really a martial art but a performance art

      @mugnuz@mugnuzАй бұрын
  • Kudos for mentioning our favorite tinker, mate!

    @drillerdev4624@drillerdev46242 ай бұрын
  • Another amazing video - love seeing engineering / nature crossovers 🌀

    @loisplayer2658@loisplayer26582 ай бұрын
  • Such an interesting video! For the wind turbines, another practical problem for Fibonacci blades is they need to be able to be "feathered" to slow down or completely stop in high winds -- or whenever the turbine operators need to stop the blade rotation. The traditional horizontal blades would just "feather" so they're parallel with the wind so that all wind rotation force ceases. But the Fibonacci blades don't appear to have this capability.

    @beyondfossil@beyondfossil2 ай бұрын
  • Very similar to Viktor Schauberger's impeller designs from the early 1900's. "Comprehend and copy nature" is a good watch, we can learn a lot about efficiency from the natural world.

    @infinitedaves@infinitedaves2 ай бұрын
    • pee on hydrants, no flushing. 😮❤

      @dareese6778@dareese67782 ай бұрын
    • Nature doesn't use many rotating components... Does it?

      @davebutler3905@davebutler39052 ай бұрын
    • @@davebutler3905 A spiral does not have to rotate to be a spiral.

      @3.k@3.k2 ай бұрын
  • This would be lovely in capetown the southeaster is pumping this time of the years and the electricity blackouts has gotten worse

    @peetsnort@peetsnort2 ай бұрын
    • Without the grid, you will need a battery for stable power.

      @SolarWebsite@SolarWebsite2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SolarWebsitefactually incorrect

      @speed999-uj5kr@speed999-uj5kr2 ай бұрын
    • @@speed999-uj5kr If you're running anything more advanced than an incandescent bulb or toaster on unstabilised power from solar and/or wind, good luck with buying new comouters etc regularly.

      @SolarWebsite@SolarWebsite2 ай бұрын
  • Wow...I had almost this exact thought not too long ago its inspiring to see people are actually doing something with this design. What if we made each spiral have an airfoil cross section curved on the bottom side so there would be two sources of lift plus the drag? Or maybe just on the ends where the spirals don't overlap.

    @NoFaceFiles@NoFaceFiles2 ай бұрын
  • Out of curiosity, what video app do you use to make these videos? And I love the transitions between elements really makes it feel like a little neat presentation good work!

    @c0mpl3x91@c0mpl3x912 ай бұрын
  • In case nobody knows who created this, it was Victor schauberger. He wrote a book we should all be reading, called copy and comprehend nature

    @3starsfell@3starsfell2 ай бұрын
  • Great video, look forward to checking your other videos. Not sure why there is '145%' in the Title Graphic, the one representing the video, it may stop many serious people watching it FYI.

    @jabyers@jabyers2 ай бұрын
    • It seems to refer to the the study that found spiral blades to be up to 45% more efficient, than traditional blades. Thus assuming 100% of a traditional blade you would then have 145%. This is poor math at least and clickbait at worst. Hopefully someone will do a better video on the topic, as there are a few minor errors in this one.

      @jeremytaylor3532@jeremytaylor35322 ай бұрын
  • Being an avid fan of all things Φ, I found your video instructive and fascinating! A question I have is, "How do such turbines fare in really strong winds?", as conventional turbines can feather to prevent damage in such conditions. Other commentators have suggested the 'economics' are paramount considerations but I tend to view things through a resource-based economy lens rather than an imaginary usury-based bankonomic one with the utter nonsense of elastic & daily changing values of bankster currencies. I'd certainly would like to see houses fitted with these Fibonacci turbines to help lighten the load on both the power grid and our environmental footprints though I see no need to actually connect these turbines to the grid.

    @JohnThomas-ci9ml@JohnThomas-ci9ml2 ай бұрын
    • Just don't mount them on the roof of any building that wasn't specifically engineered for them. The vibrations of a wind turbine can shake a building apart over the life of the turbine. Sticking them on a pole in the back yard also makes them much more accessible, because you can lay the pole down when you need to do maintenance or repairs. Of course, the turbines that have a vertical axis fix this by putting all the most wearing parts at ground level.

      @tealkerberus748@tealkerberus748Ай бұрын
  • '145% efficiency' raises a big red flag and makes me instantly suspicious. We're into perpetual motion machine territory here before I've even started watching. Assuming no losses - a big assumption - you cannot exceed 100%

    @pedtrog6443@pedtrog64432 ай бұрын
  • I've delved into that rabbit hole a few times, its really easy to get lost, but if you take a step back and get an overview, its pretty clear the Fibonacci sequence is an inherent aspect of the way our universe functions. "Is the universe a fractal that can be calculated in equation? Is it Fibonaccis perfect golden spiral or is it just my imagination? Does the cosmic web of super clusters containing vast quantities of galaxies, that each within have countless systems that just like ours contain this curiosity?"

    @brokenacoustic@brokenacoustic2 ай бұрын
    • No

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
    • Addressing your first sentence, I wholeheartedly agree that the Fibonacci sequence is indeed a fundamental & underlying aspect of the entire physical universe. There is an unassailable reason for the prominence of the Fibonacci sequence & Φ across the universe. I hope to elaborate on this shortly on KZhead & other platforms.

      @JohnThomas-ci9ml@JohnThomas-ci9ml2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnThomas-ci9ml no

      @petterlarsson7257@petterlarsson7257Ай бұрын
  • thanks for all the gret info, one thing at the end you said about them not replacing the others I disagree with, the other need to be higher up and further apart to not disrupt eachother, but I imagine the spiral you can have a small field of them packed together at different heights or on walls more out of sight from the skyline view. how close can they go together? infront of one another and abrest? diagonaly even.

    @lordreginaldfilibuster@lordreginaldfilibuster2 ай бұрын
  • The Pyamid and Golden ratio is actuallly correct when you consider that the Golen ratio was used to approximate Pi via the fbonacci series. It is oft quoted as a graient of 280 cubits to 220 (1760 / 2 / 280) usings 22/7 as Pi which is 55/21 x 6/5 Herodotus quotes a vairation of this using The area of the face being equal to the square of the height using sqrt 8 x 100 cubits = sqrt 80,000 This is a Pyamid with gradient sqrt Phi : 1. The relaitonship between 280 and 100x sqrt 8 is the relationship between the 28 finger cubits, the 20 finger remen diagonal cubit and the 144/7" Greek cane cubit. These scale in the ration sqrt 0.98:1 (effectively 99%), which is exactly the same as the 30 finger sumerian cubits using 21 sides as a downscale factor of sqrt 0.98 Thus 280 remen diagonal royal cubits = 282+ 28 finger cubits. Thus 280 cane cubits = 282+ remen diagonal cubits.

    @RuneRelic@RuneRelic2 ай бұрын
  • As an Indian, I really appreciate your work and thanks for giving us credit. Many mathematical concepts are originated by Indians (Hindus, jains, etc.) but most westerners just avoid giving credits.

    @AhamKaustubhGaur@AhamKaustubhGaur2 ай бұрын
  • According to Betz's law, no wind turbine of any mechanism can capture more than 16/27 (59.3%) of the kinetic energy in wind!!

    @masterofthegame8764@masterofthegame87642 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Don't you just hate it when someone plays fast and loose with the definition of "efficiency" and then tries to imply that something they're trying to sell you is an over-unity machine?

      @silverhammer7779@silverhammer77792 ай бұрын
    • @@silverhammer7779What really bugs me is when people tried to imply that somehow it is possible to get more than 100% efficiency from ANYTHING. That is, by definition, impossible.

      @protoborg@protoborg2 ай бұрын
    • @@protoborgYep. Unless they repealed the Second Law of Thermodynamics while we weren't looking... 🤔

      @silverhammer7779@silverhammer77792 ай бұрын
    • @@silverhammer7779 Laws are meant to be broken...

      @SixballQ45@SixballQ452 күн бұрын
    • @@SixballQ45 Tell ya what...why don't you come up with something that actually produces energy over 100% efficiency and get back to us? Then you definitely won't have to rely on public assistance, and you can finally move out of mom's basement.

      @silverhammer7779@silverhammer7779Күн бұрын
  • Also thing to note, this design while may be better at lower speeds witch would be really nice in not so windy areas, fails moment you add in the real life problems like snow and ice. From the looks of it, this will just gobble up all the ice into the groove and fill it over time. Depending on the material used, you could use black non sticky material to melt off any ice forming, or use heating coil in the center axis, but like with any other wind turbine this uses energy and defeats the point, not allowing the turbine even spin when enough ice has formed during calm weather. Also due the surface area that would require chinook helicopter to spray enough ethanol to defrost the turbine, instead of smaller helicopter used today to defrost them.

    @Hellsong89@Hellsong892 ай бұрын
    • A turbine slowly spinning in low wind still produces hardly any energy. It might look nice but just like solar panels on a cloudy day in December they are practically useless.

      @AdrieKooijman@AdrieKooijman2 ай бұрын
  • fascinating how natural patterns are so efficient. Fun and wonderfully informative vid. Subbed. Thanks for a wonderfully educational video.

    @gregkral4467@gregkral44672 ай бұрын
  • Super fascinating and exciting

    @jorissimaitis7619@jorissimaitis76192 ай бұрын
  • You are aware when you add maintenance and repair into the equation that turbines become the least efficient source of energy

    @bumlookercheekymonkey3985@bumlookercheekymonkey39852 ай бұрын
    • It's also one of the least damaging to the environment. Everything has it's pros and cons.

      @planterion7969@planterion79692 ай бұрын
    • and the follow up costs of that can be immense and hard to calculate@@planterion7969

      @mugnuz@mugnuzАй бұрын
    • then come up with a more efficient way to spin them..

      @SixballQ45@SixballQ452 күн бұрын
  • Fascinating Sir. Thank you. While low altitude wind generators - say in the back garden at 3 or 4 metres height is WAY less efficient than the behemoths dotting our landscape nowadays, I do think there is a case for developing tech' like this to augment domestic solar when battery storage is also a given. Domestic energy harvesting is already having a significant impact on the need for Peaker power plants in various countries around the globe where Virtual Power Plant technology is employed. The aging electrical grids in most developed countries DOES need to be addressed. However, the rapid and previously unforeseen uptake of domestic generation that is mostly solar, is showing up as a very effective interim buffer, as electricity demand steadily increases (only partly) due to the transport electrification revolution. Good and bad times ahead...

    @jimparr01Utube@jimparr01Utube2 ай бұрын
  • Like you said the ratio is defined by the statement a/b = b/(a+b). Using the quadratic formula that is (sqrt5+1)/2 If that is specifically useful to any physics application or not, maybe. There may be some application for example in reducing product cutting waste. Looking at these propellers, they may be mostly effective in their surface contact to air, and possible complex interaction with the air caused by vacuum forces.

    @MatthewSuffidy@MatthewSuffidy2 ай бұрын
  • This concept seems promising but feels like an early iteration. There's too much surface at the outer edge which moves the fastest which is why I suspect it didn't do as well at higher speed. Wind turbines use 3 blades because that the smallest number that still balance forces that would wear them out. I wonder if a single bladed turbine in a spiral shape could be made to be perfectly balanced. That would need a lot of precision.

    @bigfishoutofwater3135@bigfishoutofwater31352 ай бұрын
    • Why overcomplicate and over engineere? 🤦🏼

      @JohnDir-xw3hf@JohnDir-xw3hf2 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@JohnDir-xw3hfThat's not complex or overengineered if it reduces to a single spiral and results in even a few percent increase in efficiency from now on. I see it as comparable to winglets, slats, washout & vortex generators on airplane wings.

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
    • If we look at it, it's basically just a regular turbine with very large blades. Like the classical old farmer wind mill, the large surface is more efficient at low wind speed because it is hit by a larger number of slow air molecules. However, at high wind speed, where the wind is much more powerful, the large surface area acts like a brick wall and pushes most of the air around the turbine, instead of through it, where its energy can be extracted. . Regular wind turbine don't break the air as much, allowing for more power extraction from the high speed air passing through. So it really is a question of choice: Does one wants to efficiently extract a little power, most of the time, from slow moving air or a lot of power from fast moving air, but only when it's windy?

      @etle113@etle1132 ай бұрын
    • Have a look at rotating spiral flagella - nature suggests this must be efficient, though possibly only at small scale. Add those bumps on whale flippers for good measure.

      @tim40gabby25@tim40gabby252 ай бұрын
    • @@tim40gabby25 You need more relevant analogues for that to be convincing, IMO.

      @dennisbecraft1303@dennisbecraft13032 ай бұрын
  • 145% efficiency does not exist its just a selling talk If you exceed 100% you create energy over unity which is impossible with the current physics

    @MF-jo6jt@MF-jo6jt2 ай бұрын
  • 11:05 - it's been rumored an engineer at Buick took this influence to design a cooling fan for their then-new 455 engine... as they needed a fan to perform with less sound signature while being able to move more air than previous designs.

    @driverjamescopeland@driverjamescopeland2 ай бұрын
  • I forgot this video was even about turbines because I was so invested in just learning about the spirals until he brought the turbines up again.

    @parkersmith5212@parkersmith52122 ай бұрын
  • Your haircut is a golden ratio

    @kylexrex@kylexrex2 ай бұрын
  • where can one find the file you used to 3d print the turbine?

    @timekiIIr@timekiIIr2 ай бұрын
    • He said In the video it was located at "Easy Cut Solutions" on KZhead. I am not sure how it is spelled out, but use your fractal imagination to find it! Lol!

      @visnuexe@visnuexe2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you very much. It's amazing👍❤

    @marcusreilly4935@marcusreilly49352 ай бұрын
  • Phi is an emergent ratio from the algorithm of adding two numbers in a sequence to get the next number. The ratio between them will always approach phi regardless of starting digits. The Fibonacci sequence just happens to be a simple integer starting point.

    @vailias@vailias2 ай бұрын
  • That's pretty cool stuff.

    @Spdman401@Spdman4012 ай бұрын
  • excuse me, but where in this video is this "145% EFFICIENCY" ??? Where does that number even come from? and why is "145% EFFICIENCY" plastered over the thumbnail like clickbait?

    @zangetsu6638@zangetsu66382 ай бұрын
    • You clearly studied carnot engine.

      @capitancodigo2165@capitancodigo2165Ай бұрын
    • @@capitancodigo2165 ?

      @zangetsu6638@zangetsu6638Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for your wonderful video. I hope that you are having a great start to February. Sheila Mink in New Mexico

    @user-xx4yl1hy7f@user-xx4yl1hy7f2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for giving an objective and non-cultish video about these topics. This video was very professional and entertaining without being conspiratorial. Ofcourse I am all for fun conspiracy theories, but these ones are simply annoying. Thankyou for your professionalism on the topic.

    @jayd6224@jayd62242 ай бұрын
  • If you were to take the 3 individual blades, and isolate them, there is another amazing possibility. If they could be placed on a scissor mechanism, much like the mechanical advance weights of an older car distributor, as the speed, or volume of the air increases, they could throw out from the center, to harvest even more wind power as it becomes available. Kind of a variable torque, dictated by available wind.

    @miketrissel5494@miketrissel54942 ай бұрын
  • You need to discuss how it responds to high wind conditions and show a comparative curve of power vs wind speed up to the point of traditional turbine trail off or destruction. Thanks, Ken.

    @kenb4849@kenb48492 ай бұрын
  • Didn’t bother watching the video - seeing efficiency of greater than 100% told me all I needed about the credibility of the information.

    @zeitgeist785@zeitgeist7852 ай бұрын
  • There’s no such thing as efficiencies above 100% because otherwise you have invented perpetual motion LOL give me a break.

    @RedNeckBallistix@RedNeckBallistix2 ай бұрын
    • I think it was comparing this shape to others, like it's 145% more efficient than another shape.

      @gamert80@gamert8011 күн бұрын
    • Just one name for you - Viktor Schauberger... LOL

      @marceloamazonas2518@marceloamazonas25187 күн бұрын
  • Okay the wind turbine in the middle off the road is awesome.

    @kommo1@kommo12 ай бұрын
    • yup - harness the air from the constant traffic is genius

      @SixballQ45@SixballQ452 күн бұрын
  • Assuming this is more efficient: There would likely have to be some sort of shroud that could be automatically put around the turbine in order to control the speed or even completely stop flow all together. The standard propeller types can turn their blades to get less wind power in addition to having brakes in the system otherwise high winds can damage them or even rip them apart purely from the centrifugal forces in extreme cases. Having this ability to stop the turbine is also important for maintenance.

    @GregAtlas@GregAtlasАй бұрын
  • Excellent presentation of an amazing subject, I plan to make 'a few'. Subscribed, thanks.

    @JeffGatto@JeffGatto29 күн бұрын
  • Generating the formula for the nth term of the Fibonacci sequence is a simple enough task for a homework problem after a first lesson in Z-transforms. The Z-transform solution for the Fibonacci recursion relationship generates a polynomial whose roots are those of the algebraic equation 1/x=1+x, whose roots are the golden ratio and its inverse. From that you get that the Fibonacci sequences goes as phi^n + phi^-n with coefficients that depend upon the first two values you feed into the Fibonacci recursion relationship. Hope you have fun doing the above.

    @histreeonics7770@histreeonics77702 ай бұрын
  • Had to leave a separate comment. This is brilliant. When these discoveries are made hundreds of years ago - why on earth do we stray from them?! Three steps forward - Two steps back.

    @boblossie3192@boblossie31922 ай бұрын
    • Because they don't work better when you factor in the total cost/benefit. They must be a lot heavier than a standard turbine covering the same swept area, and as you scale that up to 10-20 MW turbines of today, imagine the inevitably increased mechanical and material challenges. If they were truly better, we would of course use them.

      @tzenophile@tzenophile2 ай бұрын
  • The biggest win for these types of wind generators is that despite lower efficiency they have a broader operating range. A traditional three-bladed wind generator needs clean air to reach peak efficiency and cannot be used under or over a certain threshold. They need to be high up in an open space. Spiral types along with upright models usually only have one limit: speed. There are 'folding' designs out there which tuck in the blades to reduce surface area in order to stay within the 'speed limit', increasing the 'harvesting bandwidth' even more.

    @dimitri877@dimitri8772 ай бұрын
  • 11:21 Intriguing the possible relation between this decimal number and the 1/137 of the alpha constant and also the mysterious 137.037037037 which seems to relate both to 1.11111111 and 0.123456789 (though the gets occluded). 137.5 seems to divide into many numbers in a way that others don’t - it’s all a bit Room 237 to me!😮

    @markhughes7927@markhughes79272 ай бұрын
  • Really like this idea, and tempted to see if I can make one at home to help charge the car!

    @timofthomas@timofthomas2 ай бұрын
  • dear autor, can you please give a link for 3D model of tourbine you showed in this video?

    @hillarious2393@hillarious23932 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much, it's so interesting 👍

    @olahkalman498@olahkalman4982 ай бұрын
  • Thank you!

    @brentnevius2849@brentnevius28492 ай бұрын
  • 145% efficiency! that's astounding. I'll take 69% of one.

    @briankleinschmidt3664@briankleinschmidt36642 ай бұрын
  • Excellent episode! The market needs something like this for smaller to medium sized applications…more distributed power generation leads to energy security!

    @keithnance4209@keithnance42092 ай бұрын
    • I agree with this completely!

      @jacole1234@jacole12342 ай бұрын
    • Does it? Small wind turbines have been on the market for 100+ years. If there had been a real niche for them, why haven't this niche manifested in sales? There is a clear economy of scale here, sorry.

      @tzenophile@tzenophile2 ай бұрын
    • @@tzenophile there has been a stigma on ‘alternative’ energy generation for these past decades, driven by marketing FUD, scalability, poorly designed systems, etc…but if the price of these small systems can compete with Solar’s major price declines then the opportunity to use both types makes sense. Even if perhaps a supplemental component.

      @keithnance4209@keithnance42092 ай бұрын
    • @@keithnance4209 I would very much like to think so too. Having invested in solar and a battery (which work great) and living in a very windy place it would be wonderful to top up with a wind turbine. But I can't find any serious product (=HAWT) that would seem to recover its cost before breaking down. It would also have to be so big/tall that it would be hard to get a building permit. And with the solar and battery my remaining needs are only 2-3 MWh in the winter months, so the rational thing to do is to buy that from the Big Wind companies nearby.

      @tzenophile@tzenophile2 ай бұрын
  • One spiral that is fascinating is the spiral that the eliptical orbits the planets make as our star moves through space

    @williammaxwell1919@williammaxwell19192 ай бұрын
  • Just show how to solve simple constant-coefficient finite linear difference/recursion equations in general. Here: x^3 - 2*x^2 +5*x -1=0 has roots approximately r=0.21676, s=0.89162 + 1.95409*i, t = complex conjugate of s. So x(n+3)=2*x(n+2) -5*x(n+1) + x(n) has in particular one solution x(n)=r^n. In fact, n does not even have to be a nonnegative integer. But, to not go too far off course, assume n=nonnegative integer. Then x(n)=r^n is the solution with x(0)=1, x(1)=r, x(2)=r^2. Notice how r^n -> 0 as n-> + infinity. But, if you want to start with three initial conditions all of which are integers, then x(n)=A*r^n + B*(s^n + t^n) + C*(s^n - t^n) for some constants A, B, C. Or x(n)=A*r^n + 2*B*Re(s^n) + 2*C*Im(s^n)

    @theultimatereductionist7592@theultimatereductionist75922 ай бұрын
  • 9:58 "There's is clearly something to the spiral pattern" reminds me of uzumaki haha

    @doctorinternet8695@doctorinternet86952 ай бұрын
  • Liked the shoutout to Robert Murray-Smith @ThinkingandTinkering

    @jeffrice6745@jeffrice67452 ай бұрын
  • I love the video. Do you have a link to your 3d printed wind turbine

    @waschklaus@waschklausАй бұрын
  • Now that looks much more effective than these modern windmills with only 3 thin blades

    @MrPorkncheese@MrPorkncheese2 ай бұрын
  • Irrational numbers are shapes. pi is a circle. e is self-shaped stasis. phi is self-shaped growth.

    @williambarnes5023@williambarnes502322 күн бұрын
  • The kinetic energy / rotating mass of this geometry will not "scale-up" based purely on simple open-flow steady-state flow equations (see Betz's law), however the real concern is the ability to control (known as "feathering") the amount of generated lift & drag (a measure of captured power) in a variety of wind velocities and wind flow (turbulent and laminar) regemes. With a fixed blade geometry, feathering would need to be done by a combination of pre/post diffusers (ducting won't work efficiently at high velocity and low kinematic viscosities (high Reynolds' regimes) and azimuth holding (deliberately "stalling" by generating a large angle-of-attack wrt to the prevalent wind). Any diffusing over the turbine reduces overall efficiency and control (e.g. why there are so few "push-prop" plane designs in production) and azimuth holding mandates sufficient clutching force (mechanical and/or electro-motive) actuators which add a good deal of weight to the system. The final issue to overcome is the "dirty power" (high noise components in the electrical output) which results from vastly different flow regimes (hence high torque variances) across the rotor. This noise must be filtered out (usually by a dedicated application-specific (power grid or local storage) inverter before it can be stored and/or consumed. This electrical noise ends up being "wasted energy capture" that further reduces the overall efficiency of the system. In short, there's really nothing to be gained here. Existing "drag" designs scale-down better and existing "lift" designs scale-up better. This manages to be "good at nothing" with additional control complexities.

    @keithwilliams6007@keithwilliams60072 ай бұрын
  • *OK OK round 2: Fibonnaci Turbines Vs Toroidal Turbines!!*

    @each1-teach1@each1-teach1Ай бұрын
  • hello! this was a cool video. im always interested in seeing how the world is intelligently designed and how these apply to other fields of science. also, what is the name of the background music around 10:30 ? it sounds like the music for the CIFI game on my phone lol.

    @luketellgren9983@luketellgren99832 ай бұрын
  • i wonder how many of these urban models you need to noticably reduce wind strengths around skyscrapers, especially considering that skyscrapers usually only make up a very few percent of the total area of a city, whereas these could be placed all over it.

    @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988@nevermindmeijustinjectedaw99882 ай бұрын
  • This was a fantastic documentary,thanks

    @liamredmill9134@liamredmill91342 ай бұрын
  • And what about stuffing it onto an engine? Would it suck in the medium around the propeller, or similarly thrust it outwards?

    @atreidesson@atreidesson2 ай бұрын
  • I wonder if Fibonnaci turbines could be used in a horizontal configuration similar to the RidgeBlade product developed at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada? Their housing design and location take advantage of how wind interacts with the roof to boost efficiency.

    @WayneMacDonald1@WayneMacDonald12 ай бұрын
  • Brilliantly researched and presented! And a question - I am wondering about the physical shaft that contains the spiral. assume that you are spinning a heavy metal fibonacci spiral in a vaccum. would it spin longer than a sylinder on a shaft- or would they be the same? note: I m not a physicist!

    @spydersweb2@spydersweb22 ай бұрын
  • 7:00 OH YES - TURBINES!

    @SamundraDarion@SamundraDarion2 ай бұрын
  • Could this be applied to propeller planes as well?

    @Swenthorian@Swenthorian2 ай бұрын
  • Best wind turbine is one that works, number one. Number two, generates electricity at low wind speeds. Number three, survives high winds and doesn't self destruct.😊

    @aaronsmith593@aaronsmith5932 ай бұрын
  • This a nice example of people thinking outside the box that so many engineers have a hard time doing.

    @krissfemmpaws1029@krissfemmpaws10292 ай бұрын
  • It looks similar to a compressor fan to me Also, if I were to make a small version of this, I would add propeller blades on the outside edges to improve efficiency at higher air velocities. But with a thick airfoil so that it'll tend to stall and buffet if the air is too fast

    @nathanschaefer5148@nathanschaefer51482 ай бұрын
    • i wondered if the combo could be better, catching low & high wind. ❤

      @dareese6778@dareese67782 ай бұрын
  • Hi, could you please please share doi for the research about sunflower patterns not following fibonnaci? 😄

    @samuelpaulini@samuelpaulini2 ай бұрын
  • Nature has always been ahead of man , we would not survive without the connection with all things ! We have learned and are still learning how spectacular this planet and the universe really is as man evolves !

    @hotchihuahua1546@hotchihuahua15462 ай бұрын
  • Oh My, that's crazy how your print spun up with only a little heater fan. you would have to put some kind of brake on it to keep it slowed down to not tear it apart in even moderate wind.

    @kerianhalcon3557@kerianhalcon35572 ай бұрын
  • outstanding! covers alot of ground

    @atomicdmt8763@atomicdmt87632 ай бұрын
  • 3:40 I beg to differ here. Long before Phi there was Archimedes constant, PI, (~300BC) which also cannot be expressed as a fraction, long predating Phi.

    @billshiff2060@billshiff20602 ай бұрын
  • I wonder whether an ability to change the shape/extent etc. in accordance with windspeed would keep the efficiency up? One can imagine that some kind of extensible or shape-changing material would be a help? For example, boat sails would/could/do? change their shape somewhat on the fly.

    @malectric@malectric2 ай бұрын
  • That discoveries instantly remembered me of what i've read from Viktor Schauberger. He experimented with the spiraled Kudu horns (a big african antelope) I recommend the german wikipedia page and let it be translated, since there is a lot more information than at the english Wikipedia page. Just whats written there, might awake your interest and give some ideas.

    @fernpharao@fernpharao2 ай бұрын
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