Multiscale Simulation of Offshore Wind Variability During Frontal Passage: Brief Implication on Turbines’ Wakes and Load

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Abstract

Enhancing the performance of offshore wind park power production requires, to a large extent, a better understanding of the interactions of wind farms and individual wind turbines with the atmospheric boundary layer over a wide range of spatiotemporal scales. In this study, we use a multiscale atmospheric model chain coupled offline with the aeroelastic Fatigue, Aerodynamics, Structures, and Turbulence (FAST) code. The multiscale model contains two different components in which the nested mesoscale Weather and Research Forecast (WRF) model is coupled offline with the Parallelized Large-eddy Simulation Model (PALM). Such a multiscale framework enables to study in detail the turbine behaviour under various atmospheric forcing conditions, particularly during transient atmospheric events.

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Bakhoday-Paskyabi, M., Krutova, M., Bui, H., & Ning, X. (2022). Multiscale Simulation of Offshore Wind Variability During Frontal Passage: Brief Implication on Turbines’ Wakes and Load. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 2362). Institute of Physics. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/2362/1/012003

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