Abstract

Floater structural flexibility plays a significant role in accurate predictions of global dynamic responses of floating wind turbines (FWTs), especially for ultra-large wind turbines with increasing size and cost-effective floater design. The conventional analysis of FWTs often considers the floater as one rigid body, which cannot capture the correct resonant responses of the floater (especially the column that supports the tower). In this paper, a new approach where the floater is divided into multiple rigid bodies connected by flexible beams is developed for advanced modelling of flexible floaters in combination with coupled time-domain simulations. The hydrostatic and hydrodynmaic loads on each body from a one-body hydrodynamic analysis, together with gravitational loads and inertial loads, are implemented in the beam-based finite element model of the floater to carry out a time-domain analysis. The proposed approach is used to compare the responses of a 15-MW semi-submersible FWT considering a rigid and a flexible floater. The inclusion of floater flexibility reduces the tower natural frequency. It leads to larger bending moment amplitudes at the tower base close to the tower bending natural frequency, particularly in only-wind, irregular wave and wind-wave conditions, but smaller dynamic responses in regular wave conditions.

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