Wake redirection at higher axial induction

<p>The energy produced by wind plants can be increased by mitigating the negative effects of turbine–wake interactions. In this context, axial-induction control and wake redirection control, obtained by intentionally yawing or tilting the rotor axis away from the mean wind direction, have been...

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Main Author: C. Cossu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-03-01
Series:Wind Energy Science
Online Access:https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/6/377/2021/wes-6-377-2021.pdf
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author C. Cossu
author_facet C. Cossu
author_sort C. Cossu
collection DOAJ
description <p>The energy produced by wind plants can be increased by mitigating the negative effects of turbine–wake interactions. In this context, axial-induction control and wake redirection control, obtained by intentionally yawing or tilting the rotor axis away from the mean wind direction, have been the subject of extensive research but only very few investigations have considered their combined effect. In this study we compute power gains that are obtained by operating tilted and yawed rotors at higher axial induction by means of large-eddy simulations using the realistic native National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) 5 MW actuator disk model implemented in the Simulator for On/Offshore Wind Farm Applications (SOWFA). We show that, for the considered two-row wind-aligned array of wind turbines, the power gains of approximately 5 <span class="inline-formula">%</span> obtained by standard wake redirection at optimal tilt or yaw angles and reference axial induction can be more than tripled, to above 15 <span class="inline-formula">%</span>, by operating the tilted or yawed turbines at higher axial induction. It is also shown that significant enhancements in the power gains are obtained even for moderate overinduction. These findings confirm the potential of overinductive wake redirection highlighted by previous investigations based on more simplified turbine models that neglected wake rotation effects. The results also complement previous research on dynamic overinductive yaw control by showing that it leads to large power gain enhancements also in the case where both the yaw and the overinduction controls are static, hopefully easing the rapid testing and implementation of this combined-control approach.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-58257b86c16243d1b9b715ee3528f22c2022-12-21T20:03:00ZengCopernicus PublicationsWind Energy Science2366-74432366-74512021-03-01637738810.5194/wes-6-377-2021Wake redirection at higher axial inductionC. Cossu<p>The energy produced by wind plants can be increased by mitigating the negative effects of turbine–wake interactions. In this context, axial-induction control and wake redirection control, obtained by intentionally yawing or tilting the rotor axis away from the mean wind direction, have been the subject of extensive research but only very few investigations have considered their combined effect. In this study we compute power gains that are obtained by operating tilted and yawed rotors at higher axial induction by means of large-eddy simulations using the realistic native National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) 5 MW actuator disk model implemented in the Simulator for On/Offshore Wind Farm Applications (SOWFA). We show that, for the considered two-row wind-aligned array of wind turbines, the power gains of approximately 5 <span class="inline-formula">%</span> obtained by standard wake redirection at optimal tilt or yaw angles and reference axial induction can be more than tripled, to above 15 <span class="inline-formula">%</span>, by operating the tilted or yawed turbines at higher axial induction. It is also shown that significant enhancements in the power gains are obtained even for moderate overinduction. These findings confirm the potential of overinductive wake redirection highlighted by previous investigations based on more simplified turbine models that neglected wake rotation effects. The results also complement previous research on dynamic overinductive yaw control by showing that it leads to large power gain enhancements also in the case where both the yaw and the overinduction controls are static, hopefully easing the rapid testing and implementation of this combined-control approach.</p>https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/6/377/2021/wes-6-377-2021.pdf
spellingShingle C. Cossu
Wake redirection at higher axial induction
Wind Energy Science
title Wake redirection at higher axial induction
title_full Wake redirection at higher axial induction
title_fullStr Wake redirection at higher axial induction
title_full_unstemmed Wake redirection at higher axial induction
title_short Wake redirection at higher axial induction
title_sort wake redirection at higher axial induction
url https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/6/377/2021/wes-6-377-2021.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ccossu wakeredirectionathigheraxialinduction