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Uncertainty quantification framework for wind turbine wake measurements with a scanning lidar

Wind Energy Symposium, 2018

Herges, Thomas H.; Maniaci, David C.; Naughton, Brian T.

Sandia National Laboratories and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory conducted a field campaign at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) Facility using a customized scanning lidar from the Technical University of Denmark. The results from this field campaign were used to assess the predictive capability of computational models to capture wake dissipation and wake trajectory downstream of a wind turbine. The present work used large-eddy simulations of the wind turbine wake and a virtual SpinnerLidar to quantify the uncertainty of wind turbine wake position due to the line-of-sight sampling and probe volume averaging effects of the lidar. The LES simulations were of the SWiFT wind turbine at both a 0° and 30° yaw offset with a stable inflow. The wake position extracted from the simulated lidar sampling had an uncertainty of 2.8 m and m as compared to the wake position extracted from the full velocity field with 0° and 30° yaw offset, respectively. The larger uncertainty in calculated wake position of the 30° yaw offset case was due to the increased angle of the wake position relative to the axial flow direction and the resulting decrease in the line-of-sight velocity relative the axial velocity.

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Twistact techno-economic analysis for wind turbine applications

Naughton, Brian T.; Koplow, Jeffrey P.; Vanness, Justin W.; Sethuraman, Latha; Maness, Michael; Dykes, Katherine

This report is the final deliverable for a techno-economic analysis of the Sandia National Laboratories-developed Twistact rotary electrical conductor. The U.S. Department of Energy Wind Energy Technologies Office supported a team of researchers at Sandia National Laboratories and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory to evaluate the potential of the Twistact technology to serve as a viable replacement to rare-earth materials used in permanent-magnet direct-drive wind turbine generators. This report compares three detailed generator models, two as baseline technologies and a third incorporating the Twistact technology. These models are then used to calculate the levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for three comparable offshore wind plants using the three generator topologies. The National Renewable Energy Laboratorys techno-economic analysis indicates that Twistact technology can be used to design low-maintenance, brush-free, and wire-wound (instead of rare-earth-element (REE) permanent-magnet), direct-drive wind turbine generators without a significant change in LCOE and generation efficiency. Twistact technology acts as a hedge against sources of uncertain costs for direct-drive generators. On the one hand, for permanent-magnet direct-drive (PMDD) generators, the long-term price of REEs may increase due to increases in future demand, from electric vehicles and other technologies, whereas the supply remains limited and geographically concentrated. The potential higher prices in the future adversely affect the cost competitiveness of PMDD generators and may thwart industry investment in the development of the technology for wind turbine applications. Twistact technology can eliminate industry risk around the uncertainty of REE price and availability. Traditional wire-wound direct-drive generators experience reliability issues and higher maintenance costs because of the wear on the contact brushes necessary for field excitation. The brushes experience significant wear and require regular replacement over the lifetime of operation (on the order of a year or potentially less time). For offshore wind applications, the focus of this study, maintenance costs are higher than typical land-based systems due to the added time it often requires to access the site for repairs. Thus, eliminating the need for regular brush replacements reduces the uncertain costs and energy production losses associated with maintenance and replacement of contact brushes. Further, Twistact has a relatively negligible impact on LCOE but hedges risks associated with the current dominant designs for direct-drive generators for PMDD REE price volatility and wire-wound generator contact brush reliability. A final section looks at the overall supply chain of REEs considering the supply-side and demand-side drivers that encourage the risk of depending on these materials to support future deployment of not only wind energy but other industries as well.

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Test Plan for the Wake Steering Experiment at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) Facility

Naughton, Brian T.

This document is a test plan describing the objectives, configuration, procedures, reporting, roles, and responsibilities for conducting the joint Sandia National Laboratories and National Renewable Energy Laboratory Wake Steering Experiment at the Sandia Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) facility near Lubbock, Texas in 2016 and 2017 . The purpose of this document is to ensure the test objectives and procedures are sufficiently detailed such that al l involved personnel are able to contribute to the technical success of the test. This document is not intended to address safety explicitly which is addressed in a separate document listed in the references titled Sandia SWiFT Facility Site Operations Manual . Both documents should be reviewed by all test personnel.

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Scanning lidar spatial calibration and alignment method for wind turbine wake characterization

35th Wind Energy Symposium, 2017

Herges, Thomas H.; Maniaci, David C.; Naughton, Brian T.; Hansen, Kasper H.; Sjoholm, Mikael; Angelou, Nikolas; Mikkelsen, Torben

Sandia National Laboratories and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory conducted a field campaign at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) Facility using a customized scanning lidar from the Technical University of Denmark. The results from this field campaign will support the validation of computational models to predict wake dissipation and wake trajectory offset downstream of a stand-alone wind turbine. In particular, regarding the effect of changes in the atmospheric boundary layer inflow state and turbine yaw offset. A key step in this validation process involves quantifying, and reducing, the uncertainty in the wake measurements. The present work summarizes the process that was used to calibrate the alignment of the lidar in order to reduce this source of uncertainty in the experimental data from the SWiFT field test.

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Sandia Wake Imaging System Field Test Report: 2015 Deployment at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) Facility

Naughton, Brian T.; Herges, Thomas H.

This report presents the objectives, configuration, procedures, reporting , roles , and responsibilities and subsequent results for the field demonstration of the Sandia Wake Imaging System (SWIS) at the Sandia Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) facility near Lubbock, Texas in June and July 2015.

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Preliminary field test of the wind turbine wake imaging system

33rd Wind Energy Symposium

Herges, Thomas H.; Bossert, David B.; Schmitt, Randal L.; Maniaci, David C.; Glen, Crystal C.; Naughton, Brian T.

The Sandia Wake Imaging System is being developed to improve the spatial and temporal resolution capabilities of velocity measurements within the inflow and wake of wind turbines for the purpose of validating high-fidelity models. Doppler Global Velocimetry has been selected for use by the Sandia Wake Imaging System for its ability to scale to large field of view while still capturing instantaneous coherent structures. A set of field tests have been conducted over a 2 m × 2 m viewing area to investigate how well the system could scale to larger viewing areas applicable to planned wind turbine field testing. Successful velocity measurements of a surrogate 1 m diameter fan flow were achieved which compared favorably to independent sonic anemometer measurements. The system sensitivity limits were analyzed over a range of signal levels to calibrate radiometric modeling used to scale the system for deployment at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology facility operated by Sandia National Laboratories through U.S. Department of Energy funding. Measurement results indicate the system was near the receiver shot noise limit and that an instantaneous velocity measurement with a 1 m/s noise is in all likelihood possible on a 5 m × 5 m viewing region at the Scaled Wind Farm Technology facility.

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Results 26–50 of 67
Results 26–50 of 67