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Demonstration of synchronised scanning Lidar measurements of 2D velocity fields in a boundary-layer wind tunnel

Authors :
M F van Dooren
Mikael Sjöholm
Alberto Zasso
Nikolas Angelou
Vlaho Petrović
C. L. Bottasso
Filippo Campagnolo
Torben Mikkelsen
Martin Kühn
Alessandro Croce
Source :
Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 753:072032
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2016.

Abstract

This paper combines the currently relevant research methodologies of scaled wind turbine model experiments in wind tunnels with remote-sensing short-range WindScanner Lidar measurement technology. The wind tunnel of the Politecnico di Milano was equipped with three wind turbine models and two short-range WindScanner Lidars to demonstrate the benefits of synchronised scanning Lidars in such experimental surroundings for the first time. The dual- Lidar system can provide fully synchronised trajectory scans with sampling time scales ranging from seconds to minutes. First, staring mode measurements were compared to hot wire probe measurements commonly used in wind tunnels. This yielded goodness of fit coefficients of 0.969 and 0.902 for the 1 Hz averaged u- and v-components of the wind speed, respectively, validating the 2D measurement capability of the Lidar scanners. Subsequently, the measurement of wake profiles on a line as well as wake area scans were executed to illustrate the applicability of Lidar scanning to measuring small scale wind flow effects. The downsides of Lidar with respect to the hot wire probes are the larger measurement probe volume and the loss of some measurements due to moving blades. In contrast, the benefits are the high flexibility in conducting both point measurements and area scanning, and the fact that remote sensing techniques do not disturb the flow while measuring. The research campaign revealed a high potential for using short-range WindScanner Lidar for accurately measuring small scale flow structures in a wind tunnel.

Details

ISSN :
17426596 and 17426588
Volume :
753
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....19a9a866a7799d6d2a94aa0a2770834e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/753/7/072032