06 Fakultät Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik und Geodäsie
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/7
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Item Open Access Optimization of floating offshore wind turbine platforms with a self-tuning controller(2017) Lemmer, Frank; Müller, Kolja; Yu, Wei; Schlipf, David; Cheng, Po WenThe dynamic response of floating offshore wind turbines is complex and requires numerous design iterations in order to converge at a cost-efficient hull shape with reduced responses to wind and waves. In this article, a framework is presented, which allows the optimization of design parameters with respect to user-defined criteria such as load reduction and material costs. The optimization uses a simplified nonlinear model of the floating wind turbine and a self-tuning model-based controller. The results are shown for a concrete three-column semi-submersible and a 10MW wind turbine, for which a reduction of the fluctuating wind and wave loads is possible through the optimization. However, this happens at increased material costs for the platform due to voluminous heave plates or increased column spacing.Item Open Access FlexDyn - a new OpenFAST structural dynamics module for a general, user defined wind turbine topology(2021) Lemmer, Frank; Pérez Brovia, Santiago; Skandali, Danai; Raach, SteffenIn the present work, FlexDyn, a new structural dynamics module for the OpenFAST framework is developed. FlexDyn can generate structural equations of motion through a formalism, given user-defined rigid and elastic bodies and associated Degrees of Freedom (DOFs). The Newton-Euler formalism uses beam models with shape functions for a reduced-order representation in the same way as ElastoDyn of OpenFAST. The equations of motion are formulated in minimal coordinates, equally to ElastoDyn. FlexDyn is fully integrated into the OpenFAST framework with a coupling to AeroDyn and the new SubDyn module for FE representations of floating substructures (Jonkman, et al., 2020), among others. The formalism was previously implemented and verified in the low-order aero-hydro-servo-elastic code SLOW (Lemmer, et al., 2020). The objective of the presentation is to show the methodology of the formalized generation of equations of motion and first results of the new FlexDyn module for OpenFAST. The use case is an improved aero-elastic model, which includes the torsional DOF of the blades. The torsional DOF is not included in the ElastoDyn module but can potentially contribute to the motion and load response of the blades. The fidelity level of this use case of FlexDyn is higher than that of ElastoDyn but still below that of BeamDyn, which is a full FE representation of the blades. For this reason, the computational performance is still in the range of ElastoDyn, taking advantage of the order reduction.Item Open Access Collective pitch feedforward control of floating wind turbines using lidar(2015) Schlipf, David; Simley, Eric; Lemmer, Frank; Pao, Lucy; Cheng, Po WenIn this work a collective pitch feedforward controller for floating wind turbines is presented. The feedforward controller provides a pitch rate update to a conventional feedback controller based on a wind speed preview. The controller is designed similar to the one for onshore turbines, which has proven its capability to improve wind turbine control performance in field tests. In a first design step, perfect wind preview and a calm sea is assumed. Under these assumptions the feedforward controller is able to compensate almost perfectly the effect of changing wind speed to the rotor speed of a full nonlinear model over the entire full load region. In a second step, a nacelle-based lidar is simulated scanning the same wind field which is used also for the aero-hydro-servo-elastic simulation. With model-based wind field reconstruction methods, the rotor effective wind speed is estimated from the raw lidar data and is used in the feedforward controller after filtering out the uncorrelated frequencies. Simulation results show that even with a more realistic wind preview, the feedforward controller is able to significantly reduce rotor speed and power variations. Furthermore, structural loads on the tower, rotor shaft, and blades are decreased. A comparison to a theoretical investigation shows that the reduction in rotor speed regulation is close to the optimum.Item Open Access Multi-variable feedforward control for floating wind turbines using lidar(2020) Schlipf, David; Lemmer, Frank; Raach, SteffenIn this work a multi-variable feedforward controller for floating wind turbines is presented. The feedforward controller provides a pitch rate and a torque update to a conventional feedback controller based on a wind speed preview. A 10 MW reference wind turbine is used on a semi submersible floating platform to study the potential of the controller. An open-source simulation tool is extended with an realistic lidar simulator and the lidar data processing, feedforward controller, and feedback controller are implemented in modular setup. The lidar measurements are fully motion compensated and combined to provide a preview of the rotor-effective wind speed to the controller. The feedforward controller is designed to minimize structural loads and to decrease the platform pitch motion. In verification and simulation studies the concept is demonstrated and the multi-variable feedforward controller shows a promising improvement in speed regulation and load reduction on the floating wind turbine.Item Open Access Prospects of linear model predictive control on a 10MW floating wind turbine(2015) Lemmer, Frank; Raach, Steffen; Schlipf, David; Cheng, Po WenThe presented research has the objective of supporting the integrated conceptual design of floating offshore wind turbines (FOWT). The dynamics of the multidisciplinary coupled system with the aerodynamics, hydrodynamics, structural dynamics, the catenary mooring lines and the controller shall be represented in simulation models adapted to the current design stage. Here, a linear model-predictive controller (MPC) as an optimal multiple input-multiple output (MIMO) controller is designed for a novel concept of the floating foundation for a 10MW wind turbine. The performance of this controller is easily adjustable by a cost function with multiple objectives. Therefore, the MPC can be seen as a benchmark controller in the concept phase, based on a simplified coupled simulation model with only approximate model information. The linear model is verified against its nonlinear counterpart and the performance of the MPC compared to a SISO PI-controller, which is also designed in this work. The developed models show to be well suited and the linear MPC shows a reduction of the rotor speed overshoot and tower bending from a deterministic gust.Item Open Access Advances on reduced-order modeling of floating offshore wind turbines(2021) Lemmer, Frank; Yu, Wei; Steinacker, Heiner; Skandali, Danai; Raach, SteffenAero-hydro-servo-elastic modeling of Floating Offshore Wind Turbines (FOWTs) is a key component in the design process of various components of the system. Different approaches to order reduction have been investigated with the aim of improving structural design, manufacturing, transport and installation, but also the dynamic behavior, which is largely affected by the blade pitch controller. The present work builds on previous works on the SLOW (Simplified Low-Order Wind Turbine) code, which has already been used for the above purposes, including controller design. While the previous rigid rotor model gives good controllers in most cases, we investigate in the present work the question if aero-elastic effects in the design model can improve advanced controllers. The SLOW model is extended for the flapwise bending and coupled to NREL's AeroDyn, linearized and verified with the OlavOlsen OO-Star Wind Floater Semi 10MW public FOWT model. The results show that the nonlinear and linear reduced-order SLOW models agree well against OpenFAST. The state-feedback Linear Quadratic Regulator (LQR) applied with the same weight functions to both models, the old actuator disk, and the new aero-elastic model shows that the LQR becomes more sensitive to nonlinear excitation and that the state feedback matrix is significantly different, which has an effect on the performance and potentially also on the robustness. Thus modeling uncertainties might even be more critical for the LQR of the higher-fidelity model.Item Open Access The TripleSpar campaign: validation of a reduced-order simulation model for floating wind turbines(2018) Lemmer, Frank; Yu, Wei; Cheng, Po Wen; Pegalajar-Jurado, Antonio; Borg, Michael; Mikkelsen, Robert F.; Bredmose, HenrikDifferent research groups have recently tested scaled floating offshore wind turbines including blade pitch control. A test conducted by the University of Stuttgart (Germany), DTU (Denmark) and CENER (Spain) at the Danish Hydraulic Institute (DHI) in 2016 successfully demonstrated a real-time blade pitch controller on the public 10MW TripleSpar semisubmersible concept at a scale of 1/60. In the presented work a reduced-order simulation model including control is compared against the model tests. The model has only five degrees of freedom and is formulated either in the time-domain or in the frequency-domain. In a first step the Morison drag coefficients are identified from decay tests as well as irregular wave cases. The identified drag coefficients depend clearly on the sea state, with the highest ones for the decay tests and small sea states. This is an important finding, for example for the design of a robust controller, which depends on the system damping. It is shown that the simplified model can well represent the dominant physical effects of the coupled system with a substantially reduced simulation time, compared to state-of-the-art models.Item Open Access Validation of INNWIND.EU scaled model tests of a semisubmersible floating wind turbine(2016) Koch, Christian; Lemmer, Frank; Borisade, Friedemann; Matha, Denis; Cheng, Po WenThe subject of this study is the verification and the validation of existing numerical codes for floating offshore wind turbine structures using wave tank model tests as part of the INNWIND.EU project. A model of the OC4-DeepCwind semisubmersible platform, together with a Froude scaled rotor model with low-Reynolds airfoils is tested in a combined wind-and-wave basin. The simulation environment comprises the multibody software SIMPACK with the HydroDyn module for the hydrodynamic loads, MAP++ for the mooring line forces and AeroDyn for the aerodynamic loads. The focus of this paper is the validation of the hydrodynamics of a modified model hull shape, which compensates for the excess mass of the nacelle. Furthermore also first steady wind simulations without wave excitation have been carried out. The results show that the model is validated and gives the basis for further research based on the conducted experiments.