Assessment of Wind Parameter Sensitivity on Extreme and Fatigue Wind Turbine Loads

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

Abstract

Wind turbines are designed using a set of simulations to ascertain the structural loads that the turbine could encounter. While mean hub-height wind speed is considered to vary, other wind parameters such as turbulence spectra, sheer, veer, spatial coherence, and component correlation are fixed or conditional values that, in reality, could have different characteristics at different sites and have a significant effect on the resulting loads. This paper therefore seeks to assess the sensitivity of different wind parameters on the resulting ultimate and fatigue loads on the turbine during normal operational conditions. Eighteen different wind parameters are screened using an Elementary Effects approach with radial points. As expected, the results show a high sensitivity of the loads to the turbulence standard deviation in the primary wind direction, but the sensitivity to wind shear is often much greater. To a lesser extent, other wind parameters that drive loads include the coherence in the primary wind direction and veer.
Original languageAmerican English
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018
Event2018 Wind Energy Symposium at the AIAA SciTech Forum - Kissimmee, Florida
Duration: 8 Jan 201812 Jan 2018

Conference

Conference2018 Wind Energy Symposium at the AIAA SciTech Forum
CityKissimmee, Florida
Period8/01/1812/01/18

Bibliographical note

See NREL/CP-5000-70445 for preprint

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/CP-5000-71343

Keywords

  • analysis
  • elementary effects
  • modeling
  • sensitivity
  • turbine loads
  • wind energy

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