Mitigating Turbine Mechanical Loads Using Engineering Model Predictive Wind Farm Controller

Cumulative O&M costs of offshore wind farms can amount to 38% of lifetime costs. In wind farms, upstream turbine wakes can result in up to 80% higher fatigue loads at downstream wind turbines. The present work therefore investigates to reduce wind turbine fatigue loads during the provision of gr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of physics. Conference series Vol. 1104; no. 1; pp. 12036 - 12048
Main Authors Kazda, J, Merz, K, Tande, J O, Cutululis, N A
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol IOP Publishing 01.10.2018
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Summary:Cumulative O&M costs of offshore wind farms can amount to 38% of lifetime costs. In wind farms, upstream turbine wakes can result in up to 80% higher fatigue loads at downstream wind turbines. The present work therefore investigates to reduce wind turbine fatigue loads during the provision of grid balancing services using model predictive wind farm control. The main objective of the developed controller is to follow a total wind farm power reference and to reduce the damage equivalent tower bending moments of the turbines in the wind farm. The novelty in the control approach is the use of an engineering model-based, linear wind farm operation model and a newly developed wind farm-scale wind turbine fatigue load model. The model predictive controller is compared with commonly used wind farm control approaches in two wind farm case studies using a dynamic wind farm simulation tool. The simulation results suggest that the proposed model predictive controller can reduce the sum of the equivalent tower bending moments of wind turbines in a wind farm during provision of ancillary services. Simulations of an eight turbine array show up to 28% lower sum equivalent tower moments as compared to commonly used wind farm controllers. The observed reduction in turbine fatigue loads is attributed to the use of adequate wind farm-scale wind turbine fatigue load models.
ISSN:1742-6588
1742-6596
DOI:10.1088/1742-6596/1104/1/012036