Abstract

Floating offshore wind turbines experience different operating conditions, such as wind and wave inflow characteristics. Accurate prediction of the loads acting on the floating wind system is essential for the system design and optimisation. However, there are a lot of uncertainties with the modelling input variables for time domain simulation tools such as OpenFAST to represent various hydro-aerodynamic and structural properties. The primary objective of this work is to identify the critical input parameters for different damage-equivalent load outputs for two substructure types: OC3 Hywind Spar and OC4 DeepCwind semisubmersible. The same rotor-nacelle assembly and tower (the NREL 5MW reference turbine) are used in both case studies. A sensitivity analysis based on the damage equivalent loads of six output quantities was conducted with 8 or 10 input parameters (depending on the floater). The dependent parameters were conditionally parameterised based on the independent inputs, such as wind speed and wind-wave misalignment.The outcomes of this work show that the floater type affects the sensitivity levels of wave characteristics and hydrodynamic drag coefficients with no significant influence on the turbulence intensity, as expected. Further, the drag coefficient for spar-buoy configuration significantly influences mooring line tension compared to the semisubmersible because of their drag-dominant slender structure. The current velocity is the most dominating parameter for the mooring loads, irrespective of the floater type. While wave characteristics also influenced some turbine loads, it was almost independent of the floater type. Furthermore, the choice of the hydrodynamic model does not affect the sensitivity level rankings. A convergence study on the number of starting points was conducted to ensure a global sensitivity approach. As seen in this study, the results are floating platform-specific. This study provides valuable insight into design-driving input parameters, characterising substructure-specific wind-wave influence.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call