Computationally Efficient Wave-Modeled Large Eddy Simulation of Finite Offshore Wind Farms
ORAL
Abstract
The increasing development of offshore wind, especially on the East Coast of the United States, requires computationally efficient simulation tools that can predict full-scale farm power production. A key coupling in offshore wind farms is the momentum transfer between the marine atmospheric boundary layer and ocean waves. A recently developed sea surface-based drag model is adopted within a Large Eddy Simulation framework to model this interaction combined with an actuator disk model for the wind turbines. This modeling framework is far less computationally intensive than wave phase-resolved approaches but more accurate than wave phase-averaged ones. Additionally, many proposed offshore wind farms on the East Coast are relatively small and are close to the shore where the boundary layer has not fully developed and a traditional streamwise periodic (effectively infinite) framework may not be accurate. The goal of this work is to extend the developed framework to the simulation of finite offshore wind farms to investigate the senstivity of velocity fields and power production to the incoming flow and to ask: do variations in incoming atmospheric turbulence or sea state have a larger influence on the wind farm?
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Presenters
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Hannah H Williams
Princeton University
Authors
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Hannah H Williams
Princeton University
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Aditya Aiyer
Princeton
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Luc Deike
Princeton University, Princeton
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Michael E Mueller
Princeton University