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Experimental load measurement on a yawed wind turbine and comparison to FAST
Author(s) -
Farid Samara,
David A. Johnson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of physics. conference series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.21
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1742-6596
pISSN - 1742-6588
DOI - 10.1088/1742-6596/1618/3/032031
Subject(s) - turbine , stall (fluid mechanics) , torque , aerodynamics , tip speed ratio , wake , airfoil , azimuth , wind power , rotor (electric) , marine engineering , mechanics , environmental science , physics , aerospace engineering , engineering , mechanical engineering , electrical engineering , optics , thermodynamics
Current interest in unsteady aerodynamics of yawed turbines for wake redirection and cyclic load alleviation requires a clear understanding of turbine load fluctuation with azimuth position. To that end, an experimental 3.5 m diameter wind turbine rig was designed to measure rotor torque, flapwise/edgewise blade root bending moment, and normal force coefficient at r/R=0.66 and 0.82. The turbine was tested inside a large scale wind generation facility with a blockage ratio of 7%. Simultaneously and in time-resolved fashion, measurements were collected to produce phase-averaged performance parameters that are presented versus azimuth while the turbine is operating at different tip speed ratios and yaw angles. The NREL FAST code predictions were then compared to experimental data under the same conditions. It was found that in non-yawed conditions, FAST predictions were accurate but discrepancies start to emerge when the turbine is yawed and operating in dynamic stall conditions. In non-yawed cases, the discrepancy between experimental and FAST data is less than 7% when the flow is attached and increases to 22% when the flow is stalled. One of the main sources of discrepancy found is in the process of correcting the airfoil coefficients to account for 3D flow effects using AirfoilPrep.

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