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Wind turbine is wind energy conversion device that produces electricity; it typically has one, two, or three blades. Wind turbines can be classified into the vertical axis type and the horizontal axis type. Most modern wind turbines use a horizontal axis configuration with two or three blades, operating either downwind or upwind.
Wind turbines can be used for stand-alone applications, or they can be connected to a utility power grid or even combined with a photovoltaic (solar cell) system, batteries, and diesel generators, called hybrid systems. Stand-alone turbines are typically used for water pumping or communications. However, and farmers in windy areas can also use turbines to generate electricity. For utility-scale sources of wind energy, a large number of turbines are usually built close together to form a wind farm.
A wind turbine can be designed for a constant speed or variable speed operation. Variable speed wind turbines can produce 8% to 15% more energy output as compared to their constant speed counterparts; however, they necessitate power electronic converters to provide a fixed frequency and fixed voltage power to their loads. Most turbine manufacturers have opted for reduction gears between the low speed turbine rotor and the high speed three-phase generators. Direct drive configuration, where a generator is coupled to the rotor of a wind turbine directly, offers high reliability, low maintenance, and possibly low cost for certain turbines.