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Large-Eddy Simulation of Atmospheric Boundary-Layer Flow Through a Wind Farm Sited on Topography

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TLDR
In this paper, a boundary-layer flow is simulated over a two-dimensional hill in order to characterize the spatial distribution of the mean velocity and the turbulence statistics, and a flow simulation is then performed through a wind farm consisting of five horizontal-axis wind turbines sited over the same hill in an aligned layout.
Abstract
Large-eddy simulation (LES) has recently been well validated and applied in the context of wind turbines over flat terrain; however, to date its accuracy has not been tested systematically in the case of turbine-wake flows over topography. Here, we investigate the wake flow in a wind farm situated on hilly terrain using LES for a case where wind-tunnel experimental data are available. To this end, first boundary-layer flow is simulated over a two-dimensional hill in order to characterize the spatial distribution of the mean velocity and the turbulence statistics. A flow simulation is then performed through a wind farm consisting of five horizontal-axis wind turbines sited over the same hill in an aligned layout. The resulting flow characteristics are compared with the former case, i.e., without wind turbines. To assess the validity of the simulations, the results are compared with the wind-tunnel measurements. It is found that LES can reproduce the flow field effectively, and, specifically, the speed-up over the hilltop and the velocity deficit and turbulence intensity enhancement induced by the turbines are well captured by the simulations. Besides, the vertical profiles of the mean velocity and turbulence intensity at different streamwise positions match well those for the experiment. In addition, another numerical experiment is carried out to show how higher (and more realistic) thrust coefficients of the turbines lead to stronger wakes and, at the same time, higher turbulence intensities.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wind-Turbine and Wind-Farm Flows: A Review

TL;DR: This review summarizes recent experimental, computational, and theoretical research efforts that have contributed to improving the understanding and ability to predict the interactions of ABL flow with wind turbines and wind farms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Secondary motion in turbulent pipe flow with three-dimensional roughness

TL;DR: In this article, the occurrence of secondary flows is investigated for three-dimensional sinusoidal roughness where the wavelength and height of the roughness elements are systematically altered, reflected in the coherent stress profile.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large-Eddy Simulation of turbine wake in complex terrain

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present large-Eddy simulation results of a turbine wake in realistic complex terrain with slopes above 0.5 and show how the presence of a strong recirculation zone in the terrain dictates the positioning of the wake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wind turbine wakes over hills

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of the hill-induced streamline distortion on wind turbine wake flows over two-dimensional hills is investigated, and an analytical modeling framework together with large-eddy simulation (LES) results are presented to investigate turbine wakes over two dimensional hills.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical study of wind turbine wakes over escarpments by a modified delayed detached eddy simulation

TL;DR: In this article, the wake of a wind turbine in a complex terrain site is investigated by a modified delayed detached eddy simulation (MDDES) and a hybrid framework to predict the wind turbine wake effects in a real wind farm is presented.
References
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Flow patterns around heart valves: A numerical method

TL;DR: In this paper, the Navier-Stokes equations on a rectangular domain are applied to the simulation of flow around the natural mitral valve of a human heart valve, where the boundary forces are of order h − 1, and because they are sensitive to small changes in boundary configuration, they tend to produce numerical instability.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Large-Eddy-Simulation Model for the Study of Planetary Boundary-Layer Turbulence

TL;DR: In this paper, a new large-eddy-simulation (LES) model code which uses a mixed pseudospectral finite-difference method was developed and tested with a simple vortex flow and with the Wangara day-33 data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent wind flow over a low hill

TL;DR: In this article, an analytical solution for the flow of an adiabatic turbulent boundary layer on a uniformly rough surface over a two-dimensional hump with small curvature was presented for the limit L/y 0 → ∞ when h/L 2k2/ln(δ/y0) where L and h are the characteristic length and height of the hump, y0 the roughness length of the surface and δ the thickness of the boundary layer.
Journal ArticleDOI

A scale-dependent dynamic model for large-eddy simulation: application to a neutral atmospheric boundary layer

TL;DR: In this paper, a scale-dependent dynamic subgrid-scale model for large-eddy simulation of turbulent flows is proposed, which does not rely on the assumption that the model coefficient is scale invariant.
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