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OC6 project Phase III: validation of the aerodynamic loading on a wind turbine rotor undergoing large motion caused by a floating support structure.

Authors :
Bergua, Roger
Robertson, Amy
Jonkman, Jason
Branlard, Emmanuel
Fontanella, Alessandro
Belloli, Marco
Schito, Paolo
Zasso, Alberto
Persico, Giacomo
Sanvito, Andrea
Amet, Ervin
Brun, Cédric
Campaña-Alonso, Guillén
Martín-San-Román, Raquel
Ruolin Cai
Jifeng Cai
Quan Qian
Wen Maoshi
Beardsell, Alec
Pirrung, Georg
Source :
Wind Energy Science; 2023, Vol. 8 Issue 4, p465-485, 21p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This paper provides a summary of the work done within Phase III of the Offshore Code Comparison Collaboration, Continued, with Correlation and unCertainty (OC6) project, under the International Energy AgencyWind Technology Collaboration Programme Task 30. This phase focused on validating the aerodynamic loading on a wind turbine rotor undergoing large motion caused by a floating support structure. Numerical models of the Technical University of Denmark 10MW reference wind turbine were validated using measurement data from a 1 V 75 scale test performed during the UNsteady Aerodynamics for FLOating Wind (UNAFLOW) project and a follow-on experimental campaign, both performed at the Politecnico di Milano wind tunnel. Validation of the models was performed by comparing the loads for steady (fixed platform) and unsteady (harmonic motion of the platform) wind conditions. For the unsteady wind conditions, the platform was forced to oscillate in the surge and pitch directions under several frequencies and amplitudes. These oscillations result in a wind variation that impacts the rotor loads (e.g., thrust and torque). For the conditions studied in these tests, the system aerodynamic response was almost steady. Only a small hysteresis in airfoil performance undergoing angle of attack variations in attached flow was observed. During the experiments, the rotor speed and blade pitch angle were held constant. However, in real wind turbine operating conditions, the surge and pitch variations would result in rotor speed variations and/or blade pitch actuations, depending on the wind turbine controller region that the system is operating. Additional simulations with these control parameters were conducted to verify the fidelity of different models. Participant results showed, in general, a good agreement with the experimental measurements and the need to account for dynamic inflow when there are changes in the flow conditions due to the rotor speed variations or blade pitch actuations in response to surge and pitch motion. Numerical models not accounting for dynamic inflow effects predicted rotor loads that were 9% lower in amplitude during rotor speed variations and 18% higher in amplitude during blade pitch actuations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23667443
Volume :
8
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Wind Energy Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163632782
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/wes-8-465-2023