Wind‐ and sea wave‐induced response mitigations of offshore wind turbines using track nonlinear energy sinks

Summary Modern offshore wind turbines (OWTs) are constructed with increasingly long blades and slender towers to capture wind resources more effectively. Consequently, OWTs have become vulnerable to wind and sea wave excitations. Mitigations of unfavorable OWT vibrations have been extensively invest...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inStructural control and health monitoring Vol. 29; no. 9
Main Authors Zuo, Haoran, Zhang, Jian, Yuan, Guo‐Kai, Zhu, Songye
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Pavia John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.09.2022
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ISSN1545-2255
1545-2263
DOI10.1002/stc.2990

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Summary:Summary Modern offshore wind turbines (OWTs) are constructed with increasingly long blades and slender towers to capture wind resources more effectively. Consequently, OWTs have become vulnerable to wind and sea wave excitations. Mitigations of unfavorable OWT vibrations have been extensively investigated, with the majority focusing on passive vibration control strategies with control performance sensitive to structural frequency changes. Nonlinear energy sinks (NESs) are regarded as effective vibration control methods because their broadband fashion is robust against variations in structural frequencies. A novel NES with an improved track profile that combines both second‐ and fourth‐order polynomials (Track II NES) is proposed in the present study to improve the vibration mitigation effectiveness of traditional Track I NES with a track profile of a fourth‐order polynomial only. Governing equations of a single‐degree‐of‐freedom system with Track II NES are first established, and an equivalent linearization method is adopted to optimize the track profile and damping of the Track II NES. Moreover, a detailed 3D finite element model of a representative 5‐MW OWT is developed. Control effectiveness of the Track II NES is examined under different structural stiffnesses and mean wind speeds and then compared with that of conventional tuned mass damper (TMD) and Track I NES. Numerical results showed that the Track II NES can effectively suppress displacement and acceleration responses of OWTs and outperform its counterpart Track I NES. Moreover, the Track II NES can obtain reduction ratios close to those of the TMD but with better robustness against the detuning effect.
Bibliography:Funding information
National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 52108479; Guangdong Natural Resources Department, Grant/Award Number: [2019]019; Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Grant/Award Numbers: BBW8, ZE2L, ZVX6, P0031763; Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, Grant/Award Numbers: C7038‐20G, N_PolyU533/17
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ISSN:1545-2255
1545-2263
DOI:10.1002/stc.2990