Sigurd Johannes Savonius

Sigurd Savonius

Sigurd Johannes Savonius (2 November 1884 31 May 1931) was a Finnish architect and inventor. He is known especially for the Savonius wind turbine, which he invented in 1924.

Life and work

Savonius was born in Hämeenlinna, Finland, to Albin Laurentius Johannes Savonius (18561906) and his wife Anna Elisabeth née Rydman (18591921). He was one of three sons, together with his brothers Maximilian Lars Helge and Odert Albin.

As a young man he enjoyed experimenting with explosives. One such experiment, an attempt to mix red phosphorus with a knife and fork, cost him two fingers and the sight in his right eye.

Savonius graduated from secondary school in Helsinki in 1901. Although he had originally planned to become an engineer, he decided to study architecture and graduated in 1906 with a degree in architecture from Helsinki Polytechnic. Nevertheless, he usually referred to himself as an engineer and occupied himself mainly with technical projects.

He met his future wife, the Englishwoman Mary Appleyard (born 1884), through his brothers, who were students in her English class. He and his wife had seven children: four daughters (Moira Angela Hjördis (born 1914), Ann-Mari, Mary Henrietta and Gustava Elisabeth) and three sons (Klas Albin, Mark Adrian Briggs and Johannes Anthony (born 1916), who died in hospital on 8 March 1940 from wounds sustained in the Winter War).

The family's house was in the town of Inkoo in Southern Finland, which Savonius designed himself.

Charter of "Savonius & Company", 1920

On 8 October 1920 Savonius founded Savonius & Company, with his wife as a shareholder.

Seven years after graduating from the polytechnic, he registered his first patent, for a snow melting device to produce drinking water from snow,[1] and in 1920 he patented an optimized version of the device.[2] In 1921, he patented a cooking device for rock fireplaces.[3] In the early 1920s, Savonius concentrated especially on the control of air flows and the use of wind power. In 1923, his attention was attracted by a rotor ship built by the German engineer Anton Flettner. The ship was propelled by two large cylindrical rotorsails, which stood as tall as masts and were rotated by an engine. The idea was to take advantage of the Magnus effect: the perpendicular force exerted on the enclosed cylinders as they spun at greater than wind speed. Savonius wondered whether the ship could be driven by a rotor apparatus operating by wind power alone, without the aid of an engine.

He met with Flettner in the offices of his firm, Savonius & Company, on Lönnrotinkatu Street in Helsinki, and the two engineers conducted experiments there.

By early 1924, Savonius had developed a rotor with a cylinder open to the airflow. The two oppositely arranged vanes in this cylinder produced a high rotor torque that could be used directly for energy production. It is not known whether he succeeded in propelling a ship primarily through the Magnus effect, as originally intended. But a short biography of Savonius has suggested that such an application could well be possible, provided that a technical solution is found to convert the rotational motion of the cylinders into thrust. This suggests a successful outcome for his research into the rotor as a suitable mechanism for ship propulsion.[4] Savonius-like rotor kites demonstrate that the operating principle is useful and that in principle the rotor makes the Magnus effect available.[5] This invention for the use of wind energy was patented in Finland in 1926 and later in many other countries. The name "Savonius-Rotor", under which the invention is still known today, was bestowed by the German patent authorities. In the same year that the Finnish patent was granted, Savonius published his book The wing-rotor in theory and practice.

In addition to his eponymous rotor, Savonius also filed patents for inventions such as a wind turbine with autonomously regulated rotational speed,[6] a system for light displays and showcases,[7] and a ventilation system based on his rotor.[8] Savonius’ interest in wind flows ultimately became his undoing. He caught a chill in the wind tunnel that he had built on the premises of his business (Finland’s first wind tunnel[4]) and died from the resulting pneumonia at the age of 46. His brother Odert took over the company and expanded its offerings. The patent for the ventilation system was acquired by Flettner’s firm Flettner Ventilator Limited, which continues to manufacture modern derivatives in Britain.

Patents filed by Savonius

Patent drawing from 1915 of Savonius' snow-melting apparatus
Cover of the Finnish patent for the Savonius-Rotor

Publications

Notes and references

  1. S. Savonius (19 January 1915). "Apparatus for melting snow and the like" (PDF).
  2. S. Savonius (11 May 1920). "Apparatus for melting snow and the like" (PDF).
  3. Sigurd Savonius (22 June 1921). Kokapparat för hällspisar, Finnish Patent FI000000008500A.
  4. 1 2 Kastehelmi Nikkanen. "Savonius sieppaa tuulen" [Savonius captures the wind] (in Finnish). Retrieved 22 April 2014.
  5. Anthony Thyssen. "Types of Rotor Kites". Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  6. S.J. Savonius (1 January 1929). "Rotor adapted to be driven by wind or flowing water" (PDF).
  7. Sigurd Savonius (17 January 1929). "Anordnung fuer Lichtschilder, Schaukaesten o. dgl".
  8. Sigurd J. Savonius. "Durch Luftströmung angetriebene Vorrichtung zur Ventilation von geschlossenen Räumen oder zur Verbesserung, bezw. Erhaltung eines Schornsteinzuges".
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