1. Pitch Error and Shear Web Disbond Detection on Wind Turbine Blades for Offshore Structural Health and Prognostics Management
- Author
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Daniel Griffith, Douglas E. Adams, Noah J. Myrent, and Joshua F. Kusnick
- Subjects
Engineering ,Turbine blade ,business.industry ,Condition-based maintenance ,Turbine ,law.invention ,Offshore wind power ,Load management ,Sea breeze ,law ,Prognostics ,Submarine pipeline ,business ,Marine engineering - Abstract
Operations and maintenance costs for offshore wind plants are estimated to be significantly higher than the current costs for onshore wind plants. One way to reduce these costs would be to implement a structural health and prognostic management (SHPM) system as part of a condition based maintenance paradigm with smart load management. To facilitate the development of such a system a multiscale modeling approach has been developed to identify how the underlying physics of the system are affected by the presence of damage and faults, and how these changes manifest themselves in the operational response of a full turbine. This methodology was used to investigate the effects of rotor imbalance and shear web disbond on a 5-MW offshore wind turbine in the present report. Based on simulations of the model, the operational measurements that demonstrated the highest sensitivity to the damage/faults were the blade tip accelerations and local pitching moments for both imbalance and shear web disbond. Detection strategies have been developed for these fault mechanisms with the intent of being integrated into an operations and maintenance paradigm. The integration of the health monitoring information provides the initial steps to reducing operations and maintenance costs for an offshore wind farm while increasing turbine availability and overall profit.
- Published
- 2013
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