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Project Name: - Design and Development of Wind Power

Water lifting Pump

Mechanism A Practical Approach for


Rural Development

Clean water is difficult to acquire in many third world


countries. The aim of this project was to design and construct a
wind pump that is able to provide water to a rural third world
village. The overall design goals of this project focused on
affordability and simplicity of design rather than efficiency.
A windmill is a machine that converts the energy of wind into
rotational energy by means of vanes called sails. Originally,
windmills were developed for milling grain for food production. In
the course of history, the windmill machinery was adapted to many
other industrial uses. An important non-milling use is to pump
water, either for land drainage or to extract groundwater.
A wind pump is a windmill used for
pumping water, either as a source of
fresh water from wells, or for draining
low-lying areas of land. Wind pumps
are used when electricity is not
available. Windmills were used to
pump water since at least the 9th
century in what is now Afghanistan,
Iran and Pakistan .The use of
windmills became widespread across
the Muslim world and later spread to
China and India as well. Windmills
were later used extensively in
Europe,
particularly
in
the
Netherlands and the East Anglia area
of Great Britain, from the late middle
Ages onwards, to drain land for
agricultural or building purposes.
Early immigrants to the New World
brought with them the technology of
windmills from Europe. On US farms,
particularly on the Great Plains, wind
pumps were used to pump water
from farm wells for cattle. In early
California and some other states the windmill was part of a selfcontained domestic water system including a hand-dug well and a
redwood water tower supporting a redwood tank and enclosed by
redwood siding (tank house). The self-regulating farm wind pump
was invented by Daniel Halladay in 1854. Eventually steel blades
and steel towers replaced wooden construction.

First Author Name: Pawar Ajinkya Ramakant

College Name: Government College of Engineering And Research Awsari (kh)


Class: SE/TE/BE/ME/PhD: -BE (Mech)
Email ID: ajinkyapawar8009@gmail.com
Contact No: 9763408009

Research Paper: - Design and Development of Wind Power


Water lifting Pump

Mechanism A Practical Approach for


Rural Development

Clean water is difficult to acquire in many third world


countries. The aim of this project was to design and construct a
wind pump that is able to provide water to a rural third world
village. The overall design goals of this project focused on
affordability and simplicity of design rather than efficiency.
A windmill is a machine that converts the energy of wind into
rotational energy by means of vanes called sails. Originally,
windmills were developed for milling grain for food production. In
the course of history, the windmill machinery was adapted to many
other industrial uses. An important non-milling use is to pump
water, either for land drainage or to extract groundwater.
A wind pump is a windmill used for
pumping water, either as a source of
fresh water from wells, or for draining
low-lying areas of land. Wind pumps
are used when electricity is not
available. Windmills were used to
pump water since at least the 9th
century in what is now Afghanistan,
Iran and Pakistan .The use of
windmills became widespread across
the Muslim world and later spread to
China and India as well. Windmills
were later used extensively in
Europe,
particularly
in
the
Netherlands and the East Anglia area
of Great Britain, from the late middle
Ages onwards, to drain land for
agricultural or building purposes.
Early immigrants to the New World
brought with them the technology of
windmills from Europe. On US farms,
particularly on the Great Plains, wind
pumps were used to pump water
from farm wells for cattle. In early
California and some other states the windmill was part of a selfcontained domestic water system including a hand-dug well and a
redwood water tower supporting a redwood tank and enclosed by
redwood siding (tank house). The self-regulating farm wind pump

was invented by Daniel Halladay in 1854. Eventually steel blades


and steel towers replaced wooden construction.

First Author Name: Pawar Ajinkya Ramakant


College Name: Government College of Engineering And Research Awsari (kh)
Class: SE/TE/BE/ME/PhD: -BE (Mech)
Email ID: ajinkyapawar8009@gmail.com
Contact No: 9763408009

Poster Presentation:-ENERGY AND NANOTECHNOLOGY


ADVANCE STRATAGY FOR THE

FUTURE

The key finding of this report Nanotechnologies are a growing


group of enabling technologies, dealing with engineering at the
molecular level, which can make a substantial impact on all areas of
energy, including conversion, storage and distribution. There is a
substantial investment in research and development capacity in this
area in Australia but more needs to be done to maintain and
strengthen this effort and to ensure that the research outcomes are
put to practical use for Australias sustainable energy future. Energy
is essential to virtually every aspect of human activity and the
increasing world population and the rapid economic growth of many
developing countries, particularly China and India, will require an
increasing world energy supply. Concerns over security of supply,
sustainability of resources and increasing greenhouse gas emissions
linked to climate change have led to a worldwide effort to develop
improved use of existing fossil fuels, together with new approaches
to energy production and usage from a range of non-fossil and
renewable sources such as solar, wind , nuclear, geothermal,
biomass and tidal. Projections of energy demand indicate that no
single technological silver bullet will suffice and that an integrated
approach is needed. In Australia the dominant energy source has
been black and brown coal. Indigenous supplies are adequate for
several centuries. The same is roughly true for natural gas, but oil
supplies are in decline. Australian energy strategy will need to be
technology-based around increased energy conservation and clean coal
technology, combined with capture and storage of carbon dioxide, as well as
substantial contributions from non-fossil and renewable energy sources.

First Author Name: Pawar Ajinkya Ramakant

College Name: Government College of Engineering And Research Awsari (kh)


Class: SE/TE/BE/ME/PhD: -BE (Mech)
Email ID: ajinkyapawar8009@gmail.com
Contact No: 9763408009

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