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Influence of different wind profiles due to varying atmospheric stability on the fatigue life of wind turbines

Ameya Sathe, +1 more
- Vol. 75, Iss: 1, pp 012056
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TLDR
In this paper, the atmospheric stability is varied in order to estimate different wind profiles and simulations are run in Bladed to check its influence on the fatigue damage at the blade root.
Abstract
Offshore wind energy is being developed on a very large scale in the European seas. The objective of developing wind energy offshore is to capture greater wind speeds than are encountered onshore and as a result more energy. With this also come more challenges in the design of wind turbines due to the hostile offshore environment. Currently the standards for offshore wind turbines prescribe a site specific design for the support structures and the design for the rotor nacelle assembly according to onshore standards. Wind turbines are designed to withstand fatigue and ultimate loads. For the fatigue loading several input conditions have been prescribed, amongst which wind profile is one of them. Wind profile is represented by power law or logarithmic law as given in the standards. A neutral stability of the atmosphere is considered while obtaining the wind profile using the logarithmic law. In this paper the atmospheric stability is varied in order to estimate different wind profiles and simulations are run in Bladed to check its influence on the fatigue damage at the blade root. The variations in the atmospheric stability has been taken into account by using some typical values of Obukhov length. From steady state simulations it has been found that atmospheric stability is important for fatigue damage. The analysis showed that variation in the distribution of atmospheric stability causes large variations in the fatigue damage for different sites. Thus, it is worthwhile to carry out a full scale study using the turbulent winds and real data for wind turbine and environmental conditions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of atmospheric stability on wind turbine loads

TL;DR: In this paper, simulations of wind turbine loads for the NREL 5 MW reference wind turbine under diabatic conditions are performed, and the authors quantified as the cumulative sum of the damage equivalent load for different wind speeds that are weighted according to the wind speed and stability distribution.
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Assessing atmospheric stability and its impacts on rotor-disk wind characteristics at an onshore wind farm

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare several approaches to define atmospheric stability to the Obukhov length (L) of a wind turbine's rotor disk and show promising results for accurate characterizations of stability.
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Comparison of the atmospheric stability and wind profiles at two wind farm sites over a long marine fetch in the North Sea

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of the atmospheric stability and wind profiles using data from meteorological masts located near two wind farm sites in the North Sea, Egmond aan Zee (up to 116 m) in the Dutch North Sea and Horns Rev (HR; up to 45 Ã m), is presented.
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Spectral behaviour of the turbulence-driven power fluctuations of wind turbines

TL;DR: In this article, the power output of three wind turbines of rotor sizes 0.12, 3.2, and 96 m with rated power spanning six decades from the order of 100 to 106 W was investigated.
References
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Book

An Introduction to Boundary Layer Meteorology

TL;DR: In this article, the boundary layer is defined as the boundary of a boundary layer, and the spectral gap is used to measure the spectral properties of the boundary layers of a turbulent flow.
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Non-Dimensional Wind and Temperature Profiles in the Atmospheric Surface Layer: A Re-Evaluation

TL;DR: In this paper, a surface-layer field experiment with turbulence measurements at three levels (3, 6, and 14 m) and simultaneous profile data has been analyzed to yield information on flux-gradient relationships for wind and temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Importance of thermal effects and sea surface roughness for offshore wind resource assessment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the applicability of the Monin-Obukhov theory for wind power prediction at offshore sites using data from the measurement program Rodsand, located in the Danish Baltic Sea.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Influence of Thermal Effects on the Wind Speed Profile of the Coastal Marine Boundary Layer

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the wind speed profile in a coastal marine environment with observations from the measurement program Rodsand, where meteorological data are collected with a 50 m high mast in the Danish Baltic Sea, about 11 km from the coast.
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