Abstract

The construction and gradual installation of turbines on wind farms has been hindered by the high cost of the energy production. An effective way to minimize energy costs is via the optimal design of wind turbines and their layout, but relevant and synthetic studies are lacking. This paper proposes a method to minimize the energy cost of offshore wind farms by simultaneously optimizing the rated wind speed, the rotor radius of wind turbines and their layout. Firstly, a new, mixed mathematical formulation of the energy cost is presented, considering the Weibull distribution for wind, the characterizing parameters of wind turbines and the distance between two turbines. Secondly, to obtain the minimum energy cost, a composite optimization algorithm was developed, which consists of an iterative method and an improved particle swarm optimization algorithm. The former was used to search the minimal energy costs that relate to the design parameters of a single wind turbine, while the latter was adopted for optimizing the layout of the wind turbines iteratively. Finally, the proposed method was applied to three case studies with variable wind speed and constant wind direction. Results of the case studies show that the reduced energy cost after optimization has a range of 0–0.001 $/kWh, which confirms the effectiveness of the proposed approach. Meanwhile, the layout of the wind turbines after optimization tends to locate the two wind turbines with the biggest spacing in the wind direction, which justifies the utilization of layout optimization. Furthermore, exploring the optimally designed parameters of wind turbines revealed that the wind farms with a high mean wind speed can have a wider range of turbine capacity than those with a low wind speed, which offers more freedom for the designers when constructing offshore wind farms at wind sites with rich wind resources.

Highlights

  • An offshore wind farm shows more benefit in terms of higher wind speed, less turbulence, unrestricted area and less impact on residents compared with an onshore wind farm [1]

  • The results show that the wind farm has a minimum cost of energy (COE) of 0.089 $/kwh at a rated speed of 10 m/s and a rotor radius of 60 m

  • By summarizing the optimal layouts of the three cases studied, it is clear that the results show a similar tendency, that the biggest spacing between two wind turbines is kept in the wind direction, which is consistent with the expected results

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An offshore wind farm shows more benefit in terms of higher wind speed, less turbulence, unrestricted area and less impact on residents compared with an onshore wind farm [1]. The construction of offshore wind farms brings about expensive ocean treatment, plus installation, operation and maintenance costs, which have greatly slowed down the development of wind energy and hindered the construction of offshore wind farms. In order to obtain a cost-effective wind farm, the cost of energy (COE) at offshore wind farms should be optimized. COE is widely used by project developers to evaluate the economic benefit of a project in short, medium and long terms.

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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