Main Bearing Response in a Waked 15-MW Floating Wind Turbine in Below-Rated Conditions: Article No. 37

Veronica Krathe, Regis Thedin, Jason Jonkman, Amir Nejad, Erin Bachynski-Polic

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Increased wind turbine size raises unknowns related to structural flexibility. Moreover, moving to deeper waters, component reliability becomes more critical. This work investigates main bearing response dependence on drivetrain flexibility and wake impingement in a two-turbine wind farm. A 15-MW floating direct-drive turbine is considered. Large eddy simulations (LES) are employed to model neutral, stable and unstable atmospheric conditions at below-rated mean wind speed, while the engineering codes OpenFAST and FAST.Farm simulate turbine and wake behavior. Results indicate significant sensitivities in fatigue estimates to lateral distance between the upstream and downstream turbine. The trends are most substantial in stable conditions, where the waked downwind main bearing sees twice the fatigue damage estimates of the upstream turbine for one position and 50% for another. Main bearing fatigue sensitivity to drivetrain flexibility is minor, while properly including generator rotor inertia loads is important for the axial forces of the locating (axially fixed) bearing, especially in stable conditions.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages18
JournalForschung im Ingenieurwesen/Engineering Research
Volume89
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-5000-94160

Keywords

  • coupled analysis
  • floating wind turbine
  • main bearing
  • wake

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