Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations

<p>The optimisation of the power output of wind turbines requires the consideration of various aspects including turbine design, wind farm layout and more. An improved understanding of the interaction of wind turbines with the atmospheric boundary layer is an essential prerequisite for such op...

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Main Authors: S. Krüger, G. Steinfeld, M. Kraft, L. J. Lukassen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2022-02-01
Series:Wind Energy Science
Online Access:https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/7/323/2022/wes-7-323-2022.pdf
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author S. Krüger
G. Steinfeld
M. Kraft
L. J. Lukassen
author_facet S. Krüger
G. Steinfeld
M. Kraft
L. J. Lukassen
author_sort S. Krüger
collection DOAJ
description <p>The optimisation of the power output of wind turbines requires the consideration of various aspects including turbine design, wind farm layout and more. An improved understanding of the interaction of wind turbines with the atmospheric boundary layer is an essential prerequisite for such optimisations. With numerical simulations, a variety of different situations and turbine designs can be compared and evaluated. For such a detailed analysis, the output of an extensive number of turbine and flow parameters is of great importance. In this paper a coupling of the aeroelastic code FAST (fatigue, aerodynamics, structures, and turbulence) and the large-eddy simulation tool PALM (parallelised large-eddy simulation model) is presented. The advantage of the coupling of these models is that it enables the analysis of the turbine behaviour, among others turbine power, blade and tower loads, under different atmospheric conditions. The proposed coupling is tested with the generic National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) 5 MW turbine and the operational eno114 3.5 MW turbine. Simulating the NREL 5 MW turbine allows for a first evaluation of our PALM–FAST coupling approach based on characteristics of the NREL turbine reported in the literature. The basic test of the coupling with the NREL 5 MW turbine shows that the power curve obtained is very close to the one when using FAST alone. Furthermore, a validation with free-field measurement data for the eno114 3.5 MW turbine for a site in northern Germany is performed. The results show a good agreement with the free-field measurement data. Additionally, our coupling offers an enormous reduction of the computing time in comparison to an actuator line model, in one of our cases by 89 %, and at the same time an extensive output of turbine data.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-e0966ee718de4a70b59d0e04bed95b8f2022-12-21T23:44:45ZengCopernicus PublicationsWind Energy Science2366-74432366-74512022-02-01732334410.5194/wes-7-323-2022Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculationsS. KrügerG. SteinfeldM. KraftL. J. Lukassen<p>The optimisation of the power output of wind turbines requires the consideration of various aspects including turbine design, wind farm layout and more. An improved understanding of the interaction of wind turbines with the atmospheric boundary layer is an essential prerequisite for such optimisations. With numerical simulations, a variety of different situations and turbine designs can be compared and evaluated. For such a detailed analysis, the output of an extensive number of turbine and flow parameters is of great importance. In this paper a coupling of the aeroelastic code FAST (fatigue, aerodynamics, structures, and turbulence) and the large-eddy simulation tool PALM (parallelised large-eddy simulation model) is presented. The advantage of the coupling of these models is that it enables the analysis of the turbine behaviour, among others turbine power, blade and tower loads, under different atmospheric conditions. The proposed coupling is tested with the generic National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) 5 MW turbine and the operational eno114 3.5 MW turbine. Simulating the NREL 5 MW turbine allows for a first evaluation of our PALM–FAST coupling approach based on characteristics of the NREL turbine reported in the literature. The basic test of the coupling with the NREL 5 MW turbine shows that the power curve obtained is very close to the one when using FAST alone. Furthermore, a validation with free-field measurement data for the eno114 3.5 MW turbine for a site in northern Germany is performed. The results show a good agreement with the free-field measurement data. Additionally, our coupling offers an enormous reduction of the computing time in comparison to an actuator line model, in one of our cases by 89 %, and at the same time an extensive output of turbine data.</p>https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/7/323/2022/wes-7-323-2022.pdf
spellingShingle S. Krüger
G. Steinfeld
M. Kraft
L. J. Lukassen
Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
Wind Energy Science
title Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
title_full Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
title_fullStr Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
title_full_unstemmed Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
title_short Validation of a coupled atmospheric–aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
title_sort validation of a coupled atmospheric aeroelastic model system for wind turbine power and load calculations
url https://wes.copernicus.org/articles/7/323/2022/wes-7-323-2022.pdf
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AT gsteinfeld validationofacoupledatmosphericaeroelasticmodelsystemforwindturbinepowerandloadcalculations
AT mkraft validationofacoupledatmosphericaeroelasticmodelsystemforwindturbinepowerandloadcalculations
AT ljlukassen validationofacoupledatmosphericaeroelasticmodelsystemforwindturbinepowerandloadcalculations