Abstract

In wind farms, wakes originating from upstream turbines cause reduced energy extraction and increased loading variability in downstream rows. The prospect of mitigating these detrimental effects through coordinated controllers at the wind-farm level has fueled a multitude of research efforts in wind-farm control. The main strategies in wind-farm control are to influence the velocity deficits in the wake by deviating from locally optimal axial induction setpoints on the one hand, and steering wakes away from downstream rows through yaw misalignment on the other hand. The current work investigates dynamic induction and yaw control of individual turbines for wind-farm power maximization in large-eddy simulations. To this end, receding-horizon optimal control techniques combined with continuous adjoint gradient evaluations are used. We study a 4 × 4 aligned wind farm, and find that for this farm layout yaw control is more effective than induction control, both for uniform and turbulent inflow conditions. Analysis of optimal yaw controls leads to the definition of two simplified yaw control strategies, in which wake meandering and wake redirection are exploited respectively. Furthermore it is found that dynamic yawing provides significant benefits over static yaw control in turbulent flow environments, whereas this is not the case for uniform inflow. Finally, the potential of combining overinductive axial induction control with yaw control is shown, with power gains that approximate the sum of those achieved by each control strategy separately.

Highlights

  • Complex wake interactions between wind turbines situated in wind farms lead to both decreased energy extraction efficiency and increased loading in downstream rows

  • Considerable research investigations have been performed into control strategies that aim to mitigate these detrimental effects through coordinated wind-farm control

  • For cases based on exclusively induction control, i.e., I2 and I3, it can be seen that, the relative increase is larger for uniform inflow, the overall attainable wind-farm efficiency is higher for turbulent inflow conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Complex wake interactions between wind turbines situated in wind farms lead to both decreased energy extraction efficiency and increased loading in downstream rows. The current wind-farm control paradigm maximizes performance and minimizes loads at the turbine level, and does not take these interactions into account. Considerable research investigations have been performed into control strategies that aim to mitigate these detrimental effects through coordinated wind-farm control. The existing literature on wind-farm control for power maximization exhibits a dichotomy in control strategies between axial induction control and wake redirection control [1]. Both strategies aim at improving the overall wind-farm efficiency by operating upstream turbines at locally non-optimal off-design conditions, altering the flow field through the wind farm such that power gains in downstream regions compensate for upstream efficiency losses. A second classification can be made based on the dynamics of the control law, i.e., static or dynamic control

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