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WIND TURBINE CONTROL DESIGN TO REDUCE CAPITAL COSTS P. Jeff Darrow(Colorado School of Mines) Alan Wright(National Renewable Energy Laboratory) Kathryn E. Johnson(Colorado School of Mines)
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Overview Introduction Wind Turbine Description Baseline Controller Description Design Load Cases (DLCs) Preliminary Results Conclusions Future Work
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Introduction - Work Site(s) This research in this project is being performed at two sites The National Wind Technology Center (NREL) Colorado School of Mines
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Introduction - Motivation Increasing demand for wind energy Wind turbines operate in extreme conditions Experiencing both fatigue and extreme loads IEC dictates a minimum design life of 20 years The current design approach is to use robust components This causes a high capital cost of each wind turbine
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Introduction – Goals Perform a full loads case analysis Help guide wind turbine control research Identify design driving events and the responsible factors Develop advanced control techniques to mitigate prominent loads Show a potential to reduce capital costs with controller design
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Introduction - General This research is still in progress Results are specific to the CART3
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Controls Advanced Research Turbine Wind Turbine Description
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Regions of Operation
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Controls Advanced Research Turbines The NWTC has two primary research turbines Model: Westinghouse WTG-600 Originally from a wind farm in Oahu, Hawaii However, they are not ordinary (industry) turbines Specially outfitted with extra sensors and actuators for research purposes Original pitch system replaced New generator system added New control system added
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Control Actuators Blade pitch Limit of 18˚/second Generator torque Limit of 3581 N*m Yaw Limit of 0.5 ˚/second
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CART3 Characteristics 3 bladed, upwind Active yaw Rated power: ~600 kW Rated torque: 3581 N*m Class IIB rating by IEC Rated wind speed: 13.5 m/s Rated rotor speed: 41.7 rpm C p,max : 0.4666
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CART3 Model for Simulations Three main components Rotor Tower Nacelle Modeled with the NREL design- code FAST Uses many DOF’s to model turbine dynamics
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CART Model - DOFs 1 st Tower Side-to-Side Mode Shaft Torsion 1 st Tower Fore-Aft Mode
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Design Implementation Verification Baseline Controller Description
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Baseline Controller Design Baseline controller works in regions 2, 2.5, and 3 Region 2 uses torque control: Regions 2.5 provides a linear torque curve Region 3 uses a PID type collective pitch controller
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Baseline Controller Implementation The fore mentioned control scheme is implemented using a DLL linked to the FAST model Region 2 control is built into the FAST simulator Region 3 control is defined in the linked DLL Operation of overall controller was verified for proper operation
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Baseline Controller Verification
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Design Load Cases
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Design Load Cases (DLC’s) Defined by IEC Document 61400-1 Provides load cases to predict turbine loading Focus on cases that do not require controller logic for start-up/shutdown Each applicable case applied to the CART3 model Resulting loads observed
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DLCs of Interest DLC Winds Controls/Events ModelSpeed 1) Power Production 1.1NTMV in < V hub < V out Normal Operation 1.3ETMV in < V hub < V out Normal Operation 1.4ECDV hub = V r, V r ±2m/sNormal Operation: ±Δ Wind Direction 1.5EWSV in < V hub < V out Normal Operation: ±Δ Vert & Horz Shear 1.6NTMV in < V hub < V out Normal Operation 2) Power Production w/ Occurance of Fault 2.1NTMV hub = V r, V out Pitch Runaway Shutdown 2.3EOGV hub = V r, V r ±2m/s, V out Loss of Load Shutdown 6) Parked 6.1aEWMV hub = 0.95*V 50 Yaw = 0°, ±8° 6.2aEWMV hub = 0.95*V 50 Loss of Grid ; -180° < Yaw <180° 6.3aEWMV hub = 0.95*V 1 Yaw misalignment of +30° 7) Parked w/ Occurance of Fault 7.1aEWMV hub = 0.95*V 1 Seized Blade; Yaw = 0°, 8°
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Only a representative subset of the total available results is presented here Preliminary Results
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DLC 1.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Turbulence Model -- No faults
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DLC 1.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Turbulence Model -- No faults
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DLC 1.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Turbulence Model -- No faults
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DLC 1.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Turbulence Model -- No faults
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DLC 2.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Operating Gust -- Internal Electrical System Fault
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DLC 2.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Operating Gust -- Internal Electrical System Fault
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DLC 2.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Operating Gust -- Internal Electrical System Fault
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DLC 2.3 -- Power Production -- Extreme Operating Gust -- Internal Electrical System Fault
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DLC 6.3 -- Parked -- Extreme Wind Model -- 30 ° Yaw misalignment
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DLC 6.3 -- Parked -- Extreme Wind Model -- 30 ° Yaw misalignment
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DLC 6.3 -- Parked -- Extreme Wind Model -- 30 ° Yaw misalignment
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DLC 6.3 -- Parked -- Extreme Wind Model -- 30 ° Yaw misalignment
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Conclusions & Future Work
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Conclusions The CART3 had been successfully modeled in FAST The baseline controller has been developed and implemented in simulation All DLCs of interest have been simulated We currently have all of the data needed to conduct an in depth analysis
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Future Work Continue work to quantify design driving events Design and simulate controllers to handle prominent cases Re-run the suite of DLCs to show new results We hope to show a potential to reduce the capital costs of a wind turbine by controller design
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Acknowledgements Marshall Buhl NREL Jason Jonkman NREL
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Have a wonderful day Thank You
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