Method for airborne measurement of the spatial wind speed distribution above complex terrain

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Abstract

Wind farm sites in complex terrain are subject to local wind phenomena, which have a relevant impact on a wind turbine's annual energy production. To reduce investment risk, an extensive site evaluation is therefore mandatory. Stationary long-term measurements are supplemented by computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, which are a commonly used tool to analyse and understand the three-dimensional wind flow above complex terrain. Though under intensive research, such simulations still show a high sensitivity to various input parameters like terrain, atmosphere and numerical setup. In this paper, a different approach aims to measure instead of simulate wind speed deviations above complex terrain by using a flexible, airborne measurement system. An unmanned aerial vehicle is equipped with a standard ultrasonic anemometer. The uncertainty in the system is evaluated against stationary anemometer data at different heights and shows very good agreement, especially in mean wind speed (0.12 m s-1) and mean direction (2.4g) estimation. A test measurement was conducted above a forested and hilly site to analyse the spatial and temporal variability in the wind situation. A position-dependent difference in wind speed increase of up to 30 % compared to a stationary anemometer is detected.

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Ingenhorst, C., Jacobs, G., Stößel, L., Schelenz, R., & Juretzki, B. (2021). Method for airborne measurement of the spatial wind speed distribution above complex terrain. Wind Energy Science, 6(2), 427–440. https://doi.org/10.5194/wes-6-427-2021

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