Measurement of unsteady loading and power output variability in a micro wind farm model in a wind tunnel

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Abstract

Unsteady loading and spatiotemporal characteristics of power output are measured in a wind tunnel experiment of a microscale wind farm model with 100 porous disk models. The model wind farm is placed in a scaled turbulent boundary layer, and six different layouts, varied from aligned to staggered, are considered. The measurements are done by making use of a specially designed small-scale porous disk model, instrumented with strain gages. The frequency response of the measurements goes up to the natural frequency of the model, which corresponds to a reduced frequency of 0.6 when normalized by the diameter and the mean hub height velocity. The equivalent range of timescales, scaled to field-scale values, is 15 s and longer. The accuracy and limitations of the acquisition technique are documented and verified with hot-wire measurements. The spatiotemporal measurement capabilities of the experimental setup are used to study the cross-correlation in the power output of various porous disk models of wind turbines. A significant correlation is confirmed between streamwise aligned models, while staggered models show an anti-correlation.

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Bossuyt, J., Howland, M. F., Meneveau, C., & Meyers, J. (2017). Measurement of unsteady loading and power output variability in a micro wind farm model in a wind tunnel. Experiments in Fluids, 58(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00348-016-2278-6

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