Title
Wind Farm Loads under Wake Redirection Control
Author
Kanev, S.K.
Bot, E.
Giles, J.
Publication year
2020
Abstract
Active wake control (AWC) is a strategy for operating wind farms in such a way as to reduce the wake effects on the wind turbines, potentially increasing the overall power production. There are two concepts to AWC: induction control and wake redirection. The former strategy boils down to down-regulating the upstream turbines in order to increase the wind speed in their wakes. This has generally a positive effect on the turbine loading. The wake redirection concept, which relies on intentional yaw misalignment to move wakes away from downstream turbines, has a much more prominent impact and may lead to increased loading. Moreover, the turbines are typically not designed and certified to operate at large yaw misalignments. Even though the potential upsides in terms of power gain are very interesting, the risk for damage or downtime due to increased loading is seen as the main obstacle preventing large scale implementation of this technology. In order to provide good understanding on the impacts of AWC on the turbine loads, this paper presents the results from an in-depth analysis of the fatigue loads on the turbines of an existing wind farm. Even though for some wind turbine components the fatigue loads do increase for some wind conditions under yaw misalignment, it is demonstrated that the wake-induced loading decreases even more so that the lifetime loads under AWC are generally lower.
Subject
Wind farm control
Active wake control
Turbine loads
Wake steering
Induction control
Energy Efficiency
Energy / Geological Survey Netherlands
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2af991bc-db0a-4518-8ded-de07e7688e9a
TNO identifier
878908
Publisher
TNO
Source
Energies, 1-15
Document type
article