Abstract

Offshore wind energy has recently gained much attention. During its service life, a monopile-supported offshore wind turbine (OWT) is subjected to long-term wind and wave lateral cyclic loads with different cycle characteristics, inducing accumulated deformation of the OWT system to exceed the serviceability limit state and causing safety accidents. In this study, a 1g scaled model test with a similarity ratio of 1:100 was conducted to investigate the lateral response of a monopile-supported OWT in sand under long-term wind and wave cyclic loads. Two sets of centrifugal gear cyclic loading devices applied stable long-term wind and wave cyclic loads and different cyclic load amplitudes and directions were achieved by adjusting the input voltage and counterweight masses. Four groups of long-term cyclic loading tests were conducted for the monopile-supported OWT, considering different wind load simplification methods and various wind-wave load contribution ratios. The lateral displacement and accumulated tilt of the OWT were monitored using two laser displacement transducers installed at different heights. The results show that a simplistic treatment of wind loads as static loads results in an overestimation of the cumulative rotational deformation, and an increase in the wind-wave load contribution ratio decreases the cumulative tilts of the OWT structures.

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