Abstract

Economic nonlinear model predictive control is a great choice to tackle the control issues appearing in the current wind energy industry. In this paper, instead of generator power, aerodynamic power is employed in the economic cost function to establish the required conditions of stability and convergence of the economic performance, such as turnpike and problem convexity. However, since aerodynamic power depends on time-varying wind speed, conventional time-invariant economic nonlinear model predictive controllers cannot guarantee the stability and convergence of economic performance. This paper proposes a new time-varying economic nonlinear model predictive controller for wind turbine control that considers an economic trajectory, instead of a steady-state, in its optimization problem. The proposed time-varying economic cost function directly considers aerodynamic power, the activity of pitch angle and generator torque, and fatigue loads on the shaft and tower. Therefore, this controller can maximize power extraction and reduce fatigue load on the tower, drivetrain, and actuators. Furthermore, a fast-parallel Newton-type method is used to implement the proposed controller in actual wind turbines. An accurate aeroelastic model is used to validate the performance of the proposed control scheme. The proposed controller is also compared with two tracking nonlinear model predictive controllers, the baseline controller, and a newly developed method, under fatigue and extreme load scenarios in the presence and absence of uncertainty. The simulation results show the superior economic performance of the proposed approach. Moreover, the real-time results verify the computational speed that the proposed controller requires to deploy actual wind turbines.

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