Supporting structures of wind turbines contribute to wind farm blockage effect
Scientists from Cranfield University and the University of Oxford present a theoretical model for estimating the aerodynamic effects of wind turbine towers on the performance of wind farms. Using what is called a two-scale coupled momentum balance method, the group was able to theoretically and computationally reconstruct conditions that large wind farms might face in the future, including the dampening effect that comes with spacing turbines close to one another.
A key feature of the paper, said author Lun Ma, is that this most recent update to their model looks beyond a wind turbine’s rotor.
“In this paper, we have newly taken into account the influence of wind turbine towers that act as support structures, which was ignored in the original two-scale momentum model,” Ma said. “Therefore, essentially, the new model helps us understand the potential impact of wind turbine support structures on the wind farm blockage effect.”
Even expansive offshore wind farms face a blockage effect, in which wind slows down as it approaches turbines, as well as a wake effect, in which turbines slow wind down as it passes by them.
Precisely predicting such features of a wind farm before constructing it, however, remains a major challenge for the industry.
To get at this question, the researchers turned to two-scale momentum modeling that simulates how the efficiencies of individual wind turbines decrease as more are spaced closely together within a wind farm when considered in an ideal, infinitely large wind farm.
“This efficiency reduction predicted by the two-scale momentum model is closely related to the wind farm blockage effect,” Ma said. “However, the original two-scale momentum model was a highly simplified model and needed further improvements for practical applications.”
The group combined the momentum balance equation with another approach, called actuator disc theory, which let them include other factors, such as the impact of turbine support structures. The approach allowed them to begin considering more practical scenarios, like wind farms that are a finite size.
They then conducted simulations using computational fluid dynamics to verify that such structures contribute to the blockage effect, particularly through the drag on the wind that they produce.
Ma said the group will look to better understand how the blockage effect changes with weather conditions.