Abstract

As the penetration rate of wind power in the grid continues to increase, wind speed forecasting plays a crucial role in wind power generation systems. Wind speed prediction helps optimize the operation and management of wind power generation, enhancing efficiency and reliability. However, wind speed is a nonlinear and nonstationary system, and traditional statistical methods and classical intelligent algorithms struggle to cope with dynamically updating operating conditions based on sampled data. Therefore, from the perspective of optimizing intelligent algorithms, a wind speed prediction model for wind farms was researched. In this study, we propose the Deterministic Broad Learning System (DBLS) algorithm for wind farm wind speed prediction. It effectively addresses the issues of data saturation and local minima that often occur in continuous-time system modeling. To adapt to the continuous updating of sample data, we improve the sample input of the Broad Learning System (BLS) by using a fixed-width input. When new samples are added, an equivalent number of old samples is removed to maintain the same input width, ensuring the feature capture capability of the model. Additionally, we construct a dataset of wind speed samples from 10 wind farms in Gansu Province, China. Based on this dataset, we conducted comparative experiments between the DBLS and other algorithms such as Random Forest (RF), Support Vector Regression (SVR), Extreme Learning Machines (ELM), and BLS. The comparison analysis of different algorithms was conducted using Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) and Mean Absolute Percentage Error (MAPE). Among them, the DBLS algorithm exhibited the best performance. The RMSE of the DBLS ranged from 0.762 m/s to 0.776 m/s, and the MAPE of the DBLS ranged from 0.138 to 0.149.

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