Abstract

In the present work we review the results of a series of measurements of the flow behind a model scale of a horizontal axis wind turbine rotor carried out at the water flume at Technical University of Denmark (DTU). The rotor is three-bladed and designed using Glauert theory for tip speed ratio λ =5 with a constant design lift coefficient along the span, CLdesign= 0.8. The measurements include dye visualization, Particle Image Velocimetry and Laser Doppler Anemometry. The wake instability has been studied in the range λ =3 – 9 at different cross-sections from the very near wake up to 10 rotor diameters downstream from the rotor. The initial flume flow was subject to a very low turbulence level with a uniform velocity profile, limiting the influence of external disturbances on the development of the inherent vortex instability. Using PIV measurements and visualizations, special attention was paid to detect and categorize different types of wake instabilities and the development of the flow in the near and the far wake. In parallel to PIV, LDA measurements provided data for various rotor regimes, revealing the existence of three main regular frequencies governing the development of different processes and instabilities in the rotor wake. In the far wake a constant frequency corresponding to the Strouhal number was found for the long-scale instabilities. This Strouhal number is in good agreement with the well-known constant that usually characterizes the oscillation in wakes behind bluff bodies. From associated visualizations and reconstructions of the flow field, it was found that the dynamics of the far wake is associated with the precession (rotation) of a helical vortex core. The data indicate that Strouhal number of this precession is independent of the rotor angular speed.

Highlights

  • Rotor systems such as wind turbines, hydro-turbine rotors, airplane and marine ship propellers generate complex wakes containing helical vortex structures

  • In the present work we review the results of a series of measurements of the flow behind a model scale of a horizontal axis wind turbine rotor carried out at the water flume at Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

  • Fundamental studies on helical vortices have shown that their symmetrical helical structure is unstable to small perturbations. These helical vortices play an important role in the development of the wake directly downstream of the rotor and their evolution and breakdown dynamics influence the characteristics of the resultant far-wake many rotor diameter downstream [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Rotor systems such as wind turbines, hydro-turbine rotors, airplane and marine ship propellers generate complex wakes containing helical vortex structures. Wind turbine blade rotation produces a wake, which is the result of complex dynamics and interactions between different vorticity structures. The evolution and breakdown dynamics of these helical vortices is not fully understood and is of fundamental interest in vortex dynamics. Fundamental studies on helical vortices have shown that their symmetrical helical structure is unstable to small perturbations. For wind turbines, these helical vortices play an important role in the development of the wake directly downstream of the rotor (the near-wake) and their evolution and breakdown dynamics influence the characteristics of the resultant far-wake many rotor diameter downstream [1]. In the case of three-bladed horizontal-axis wind turbines (HAWTs), vortices form in the tip and root

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