National Wind Institute
The National Wind Institute at Texas Tech University was established in December 2012, and is intended to serve as Texas Tech University's intellectual hub for interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research, commercialization and education related to wind science, wind energy, wind engineering and wind hazard mitigation and serves faculty affiliates, students, and external partners.
In 2003, with support from the National Science Foundation, the first interdisciplinary Ph.D. program dedicated to wind science and engineering was developed. Later, the Texas Wind Energy Institute was established and is a partnership between TTU and Texas State Technical College designed to develop education and career pathways to meet workforce and educational needs of the expanding wind energy industry. It is funded in part by the Texas Workforce Commission.
In an effort to streamline and to promote synergy, both WiSE and TWEI have now integrated to form the National Wind Institute.
NWI organizes and administers large multi-dimensional TTU wind-related research projects and serves as the contact point for major project sponsors and other external partners.
History
The Wind Science and Engineering Research Center was established in 1970 as the Institute for Disaster Research, following the F5 Lubbock tornado that caused 26 fatalities and over $100 million in damage. Following the aftermath of the tornado, the WISE center developed the first comprehensive wind engineering report of its kind. In 2006, the Enhanced Fujita scale was developed at TTU to update the original Fujita scale that was first introduced in 1971. In 2003, with support from the National Science Foundation, the first interdisciplinary Ph.D. program dedicated to wind science and engineering was developed. Later, the Texas Wind Energy Institute was established as a partnership between TTU and Texas State Technical College designed to develop education and career pathways to meet workforce and educational needs of the expanding wind energy industry. A bachelor's degree program in Wind Energy was opened in Spring 2012 and now has more than 100 students in the process of completing the degree requirements.Both WiSE and TWEI have now integrated to form the National Wind Institute.
Research Facilities
The Texas Tech campus hosts the NWI's administrative offices and the Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel and Wind Library.Facilities at the campus consist of:
- The Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel is a closed wind tunnel offering a by test section that is capable of producing up winds speeds of up to.
- The Debris Impact Facility
- The Pulsed Jet Wind Tunnel, which is used to simulate thunderstorm downbursts.
- The NWI's Wind Library, which hosts one of the largest collections of wind related material in the world. The collection includes Ted Fujita's papers, reports and photographs, which were donated by the Fujita family and the University of Chicago. The library also includes documentation of more than 100 windstorms.
NWI research at the Reese Technology Center
- A 200-meter data acquisition tower, used to measure and record atmospheric conditions at ten levels,
- The Scaled Wind Farm Technology Facility
- A weather balloon facility.
- VorTECH, a tornado vortex simulator.
- The Wind Engineering Research Field Laboratory