Abstract

Abstract. Lidar-assisted control (LAC) of wind turbines is a control concept that takes advantage of a nacelle-mounted lidar (a remote sensing device) to measure upstream wind speeds of a turbine to allow a preview of the incoming turbulence. Because the turbine will not be exposed to the identical turbulence as that measured by the lidar in advance, the simulation of a LAC system will be more realistic if wind evolution can be modeled in the wind field generation. Since the commonly used 3D stochastic wind field generation method does not include wind evolution, the main goal of this research is to extend the 3D method to 4D to enable the modeling of wind evolution along the wind direction. The most novel part of this research is that we propose a two-step Cholesky decomposition approach for the factorization of the coherence matrices in the wind field generation. With this approach, 4D wind fields can be generated by combining multiple statistically independent 3D wind fields. To enable better integration of the 4D method into the common workflow of wind turbine simulations, we implement the 4D method as the open-access tool evoTurb in combination with TurbSim and Mann turbulence generator. Moreover, since 4D wind field generation is supposed to be coupled with lidar simulations, and considering the range weighting effect of lidars and eventually multiple range gates, a 4D wind field will contain many more simulation points than a 3D one. To avoid excessive computational effort, we further investigate the impacts of the spatial discretization in 4D wind fields on lidar simulations to provide some insights to optimize the application of 4D wind field generation.

Highlights

  • Wind turbines are highly dynamic systems operating in turbulent wind fields in the atmospheric boundary layer, with interacting effects of aerodynamics, structural dynamics, control systems, soil dynamics, and hydrodynamics (Moriarty and Butterfield, 2009)

  • Lidar-assisted control (LAC) of wind turbines is a control concept which takes advantage of a nacelle-mounted lidar to measure upstream wind of a turbine to enable the turbine to preact to the incoming turbulence

  • Because LAC is a preview control strategy based on the upstream turbulence, an appropriate modeling of wind evolution is essential to evaluate the benefits of LAC for wind turbines in aeroelastic simulations

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Summary

Introduction

Wind turbines are highly dynamic systems operating in turbulent wind fields in the atmospheric boundary layer, with interacting effects of aerodynamics, structural dynamics, control systems, soil dynamics, and hydrodynamics (only for offshore locations) (Moriarty and Butterfield, 2009). Simulation of wind turbine systems requires algorithms to properly generate inflow turbulence. There are two commonly used tools for that: TurbSim, provided by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and the Mann turbulence generator, made available by DTU Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark. TurbSim was initially developed on the basis of the 3D wind field simulation method proposed by Veers (1988), known as the Veers method (Jonkman, 2009). This simulates stationary multidimensional random processes with specified cross-spectrum densities to generate turbulent wind velocities.

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