Abstract

While neutral atmospheric boundary layers are rare over land, they occur frequently over sea. In these cases they are almost always of the conventionally neutral type, in which the neutral boundary layer is capped by a strong inversion layer and a stably stratified atmosphere aloft. In the current study, we use large-eddy simulations (LES) to investigate the interaction between a large wind farm that has a fetch of 15 km and a conventionally neutral boundary layer (CNBL) in typical offshore conditions. At the domain inlet, we consider three different equilibrium CNBLs with heights of approximately 300 m, 500 m and 1000 m that are generated in a separate precursor LES. We find that the height of the inflow boundary layer has a significant impact on the wind farm flow development. First of all, above the farm, an internal boundary layer develops that interacts downwind with the capping inversion for the two lowest CNBL cases. Secondly, the upward displacement of the boundary layer by flow deceleration in the wind farm excites gravity waves in the inversion layer and the free atmosphere above. For the lower CNBL cases, these waves induce significant pressure gradients in the farm (both favourable and unfavourable depending on location and case). A detailed energy budget analysis in the turbine region shows that energy extracted by the wind turbines comes both from flow deceleration and from vertical turbulent entrainment. Though turbulent transport dominates near the end of the farm, flow deceleration remains significant, i.e. up to 35 % of the turbulent flux for the lowest CNBL case. In fact, while the turbulent fluxes are fully developed after eight turbine rows, the mean flow does not reach a stationary regime. A further energy budget analysis over the rest of the CNBL reveals that all energy available at turbine level comes from upwind kinetic energy in the boundary layer. In the lower CNBL cases, the pressure field induced by gravity waves plays an important role in redistributing this energy throughout the farm. Overall, in all cases entrainment at the capping inversion is negligible, and also the work done by the mean background pressure gradient, arising from the geostrophic balance in the free atmosphere, is small.

Highlights

  • When a large number of wind turbines is assembled in a farm, the aggregated effect of wind-turbine energy extraction is strong enough to change the local equilibrium of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) (Calaf, Meneveau & Meyers 2010)

  • We investigate the activation and related feedback effects of gravity waves occurring in the free atmosphere above the conventionally neutral boundary layer (CNBL)

  • We find that enhanced turbulent mixing remains limited to the internal boundary layer (IBL) and that the decrease in Coriolis forces dominates the turbulent transport of spanwise momentum, resulting in a wake deflection towards the pressure gradient

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Summary

Introduction

When a large number of wind turbines is assembled in a farm, the aggregated effect of wind-turbine energy extraction is strong enough to change the local equilibrium of the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) (Calaf, Meneveau & Meyers 2010). Shallow CNBLs occur frequently in the presence of strong inversion layers, with boundary-layer heights typically ranging between 200 and 700 m (Brost, Lenschow & Wyngaard 1982; Grant 1986; Tjernström & Smedman 1993). Under such conditions, the wind turbines are no longer confined to the inner layer of the boundary layer and outer-layer dynamics become important. Lin et al (1996) included an inversion layer when studying coherent structures and dynamics in the neutral boundary layer

Coriolis force
Rayleigh damping layer
Vertical grid size Nz
Row Row
Free atmosphere Boundary layer
Energy sources
Findings
Ri and
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