Farm-to-Farm Dynamics and Their Impact on Wind Farm Wake Recovery
ORAL
Abstract
As renewable energy generation grows in importance, increasing scrutiny is placed on the balance between land usage and power production in wind farms, with multi-array or neighboring sites becoming more attractive for utility-scale systems. Maximum efficiency of multi-farm sites is dependent on the understanding of the relationships of farm wake dynamics and how this affects recovery and production for downstream turbine arrays. This research includes farm-to-farm relationships in order to understand how turbine and farm spacing affects multi-farm systems. Scaled porous disks were placed in two arrays in the ForWind wind tunnel at varying distance between arrays (Sx = {10D, 20D, 40D}). Time-resolved particle image velocimetry was used to capture the wakes of both arrays at x/D = 10 to 40. Mean and center tracking on the individual turbine wakes showed meandering responses dependent on spanwise location. Adjusting Sx shows a compounding impact of the upstream wake on downstream farm dynamics, reflected in full-farm wake width, expansion, and recovery. This new understanding on turbine array spacing affects large-scale farm design and motivates future research on farm-to-farm wake relations.
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Presenters
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Lauryn Gormaly
Portland State University
Authors
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Lauryn Gormaly
Portland State University
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Natalie Violetta Frank
Portland State University
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Madeline S Fischer
Portland State University
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Elsa Ghebregherghis
Portland State University
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Stuart Williscroft
Portland State University
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Zein Ahmad Sadek
Portland State University
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Ondrej Fercak
Portland State University
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Sarah E Smith
Portland State University
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Konstantinos Steiros
Imperial College London, Department of Aeronautics, Imperial College London
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Martin Obligado
Centrale Lille Institut
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Joachim Peinke
University of Oldenburg
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Michael Hölling
University of Oldenburg
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Raúl Bayoán B Cal
Portland State University