Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency

http://globalchange.mit.edu/research/publications/2221

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gunturu, U.B., Schlosser, C.A.
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/70557
_version_ 1826191413027536896
author Gunturu, U.B.
Schlosser, C.A.
author_facet Gunturu, U.B.
Schlosser, C.A.
author_sort Gunturu, U.B.
collection MIT
description http://globalchange.mit.edu/research/publications/2221
first_indexed 2024-09-23T08:55:28Z
format Technical Report
id mit-1721.1/70557
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
language en_US
last_indexed 2024-09-23T08:55:28Z
publishDate 2012
publisher MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/705572019-04-10T13:24:37Z Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency Gunturu, U.B. Schlosser, C.A. http://globalchange.mit.edu/research/publications/2221 Wind resource in the continental and offshore United States has been reconstructed and characterized using metrics that describe, apart from abundance, its availability, persistence and intermittency. The Modern Era Retrospective-Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) boundary layer flux data has been used to construct wind profile at 50m, 80m, 100m and 120m turbine hub heights. The wind power density estimates at 50m are qualitatively similar to those in the US wind atlas developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), but quantitatively a class less in some regions, but are within the limits of uncertainty. The wind speeds at 80m were quantitatively and qualitatively close to the NREL wind map. The possible reasons for overestimation by NREL have been discussed. For long tailed distributions like those of the wind power density, the mean is an overestimation and median is suggested for summary representation of the wind resource. The impact of raising the wind turbine hub height on metrics of abundance, persistence, variability and intermittency is analyzed. There is a general increase in availability and abundance of wind resource but the there is an increase in intermittency in terms of level crossing rate in low resource regions. The key aspect of geographical diversification of wind farms to mitigate intermittency - that the wind power generators are statistically independent - is also tested. This condition is found in low resource regions like the east and west coasts. However, in the central US region which has rich resource the condition fails as widespread coherent intermittence in wind power density is found. Thus large regions are synchronized in having wind power or lack thereof. Thus, geographical diversification in this region needs to be planned strategically. The annual distribution of hourly wind power density shows considerable variability and suggests wind floods and droughts that roughly correspond with La-Nina and El-Nino years respectively. The collective behavior of wind farms in seven Independent System Operator (ISO) areas has also been studied. The generation duration curves for each ISO show that there is no aggregated power for some fraction of the time. Aggregation of wind turbines mitigates intermittency to some extent, but each ISO has considerable fraction of time with less than 5% capacity. The hourly wind power time series show benefit of aggregation but the high and low wind events are lumped in time, thus corroborating the result that the intermittency is synchronized. The time series show that there are instances when there is no wind power in most ISOs because of large-scale high pressure systems. An analytical consideration of the collective behavior of aggregated wind turbines shows that the benefit of aggregation saturates beyond ten units. Also, the benefit of aggregation falls rapidly with temporal correlation between the generating units. 2012-05-10T13:35:13Z 2012-05-10T13:35:13Z 2011-12 Technical Report http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/70557 Report no. 209 en_US Joint Program Report Series;209 An error occurred on the license name. An error occurred getting the license - uri. application/pdf MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change
spellingShingle Gunturu, U.B.
Schlosser, C.A.
Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title_full Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title_fullStr Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title_short Characterization of Wind Power Resource in the United States and its Intermittency
title_sort characterization of wind power resource in the united states and its intermittency
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/70557
work_keys_str_mv AT gunturuub characterizationofwindpowerresourceintheunitedstatesanditsintermittency
AT schlosserca characterizationofwindpowerresourceintheunitedstatesanditsintermittency