2020
DOI: 10.5194/wes-5-1713-2020
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Characterization of the unsteady aerodynamic response of a floating offshore wind turbine to surge motion

Abstract: Abstract. The disruptive potential of floating wind turbines has attracted the interest of both the industry and the scientific community. Lacking a rigid foundation, such machines are subject to large displacements whose impact on aerodynamic performance is not yet fully explored. In this work, the unsteady aerodynamic response to harmonic-surge motion of a scaled version of the DTU 10 MW turbine is investigated in detail. The imposed displacements have been chosen representative of typical platform motion. T… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(81 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(41 reference statements)
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“…The relation of ∆C T to C T0 shows that only in three cases the thrust reaches negative values. The almost linear relation of ∆C T to v max confirms the earlier observations byMancini et al (2020). An hypothesis is that the linear relation is explainable by the linear effect between the surge velocity and the circulation on the blades, due to the change of the non-entry boundary condition on the blade surface.In this work we will evaluate the proposed Actuator Disc Momentum theory with dynamic inflow correction in a motion and load space wider than (and encompassing) the one in Figure1.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
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“…The relation of ∆C T to C T0 shows that only in three cases the thrust reaches negative values. The almost linear relation of ∆C T to v max confirms the earlier observations byMancini et al (2020). An hypothesis is that the linear relation is explainable by the linear effect between the surge velocity and the circulation on the blades, due to the change of the non-entry boundary condition on the blade surface.In this work we will evaluate the proposed Actuator Disc Momentum theory with dynamic inflow correction in a motion and load space wider than (and encompassing) the one in Figure1.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…Floating offshore wind turbines (FOWTs) are placed on floating foundations, which leads to larger motions than wind turbines on bottom mounted foundations (de Vaal et al, 2014). This increased freedom of motion can result in several phenomena of unsteady aerodynamics at airfoil, blade, rotor and wake scale, studied by Sebastian and Lackner (2012), Sebastian and Lackner (2013), Sivalingam et al (2018), Kyle et al (2020), Wen et al (2017), Lee (2019), de Vaal et al (2014), Mancini et al (2020), Micallef and Sant (2015), Tran and Kim (2016), Chen et al (2021), Shen et al (2018), Lee (2019), Farrugia et al (2016), Cormier et al (2018), Dong et al (2019), Dong and Viré (2021) and others.…”
Section: Motivation For the Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An example of this technology is the wave monitoring system WaMoS II introduced by Ziemer and Dittmer (1994) and at the base of the real-time wave prediction system developed by Reichert et al (2010) within the On board Wave and Motion Estimator (OWME). A methodology based on 2D FFT is proposed by Naaijen and Wijaya (2014) to obtain a directional phase-resolved prediction of the wave elevation from radar data (additional information about the directional energy spectrum is required, e.g., from a wave buoy). A similar measurement could be used in wave-FF control.…”
Section: Wave Measurement and Predictionmentioning
confidence: 99%