Abstract

Monitoring the structural health of wind turbine blades is essential to increase energy capture and operational safety of turbines, and therewith enhance competitiveness of wind energy. With the current trends of designing blades ever longer, detailed knowledge of the vibrational characteristics at any point along the blade is desirable. In our approach, we monitor vibrations during operation of the turbine by wirelessly measuring accelerations on the outside of the blades. We propose an algorithm to extract so-called vibration-based fingerprints from those measurements, i.e., dominant vibrations such as eigenfrequencies and narrow-band noise. These fingerprints can then be used for subsequent analysis and visualisation, e.g., for comparing fingerprints across several sensor positions and for identifying vibrations as global or local properties. In this study, data were collected by sensors on two test turbines and fingerprints were successfully extracted for vibrations with both low and high operational variability. An analysis of sensors on the same blade indicates that fingerprints deviate for positions at large radial distance or at different blade sides and, hence, an evaluation with larger datasets of sensors at different positions is promising. In addition, the results show that distributed measurements on the blades are needed to gain a detailed understanding of blade vibrations and thereby reduce loads, increase energy harvesting and improve future blade design. In doing so, our method provides a tool for analysing vibrations with relation to environmental and operational variability in a comprehensive manner.

Highlights

  • This paper proposes a method for studying the vibrational characteristic of wind turbine blades

  • This study solely focused on monitoring blade vibrations; our proposed sensing principle is suited for monitoring blade bending as studied in [4]

  • Blade vibrations need to be studied both at different positions along the blade and during operation of the turbine

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Wind energy as a source of renewable energy is one of the essential pillars in the fight against climate change. In 2020, wind energy accounted for 16% of the overall electricity demand in the EU (EU27+UK) [1]. A further increase in capacity is urgently needed to reduce carbon emissions and requires: (i) improving the energy capture per turbine; (ii) reducing the levelised cost of energy; (iii) increasing the number of turbines and parks; and (iv) re-powering of inefficient turbines

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