Floating offshore wind turbines present a great potential for harnessing the power of
offshore wind and meeting future energy demands. Though some floating offshore
wind farms have already been commissioned, research on floating offshore wind turbine
platforms needs to be pursued, in particular for the purpose of cost reduction. In
this context, the ability to conduct scaled hydrodynamic testing of floating offshore wind
turbine platforms is an important advantage for a wave tank. The COAST Laboratory of
the University of Plymouth aims to provide this possibility. The wave tank being built before
the decision to add a wind generation system had been made, the space available
for the installation of a wind generation system in only limited, in particular without the
use of a costly gantry to install axial fans at the location of where the wind is needed.
This created the need for the investigation presented in this thesis on producing wind
in the laboratory using centrifugal fans and a ducting system as well as an expanding
diffuser. Flow distribution at the outlet of the wind generation system was determined
both thanks to CFD in OpenFOAM and experimentally for various prototypes. The
comparison of the results of 7 turbulence models to the experimental data provided by
measurements done with the first prototype allowed the determination of 4 appropriate
turbulence models in the context of indoor air flow, namely the standard k-ε, the
k-ω SST, the realizable k-ε, and the RNG k-ε model. CFD simulations for larger
prototypes using the 2 best turbulence model, that is, the k-ω SST and the realizable
k-ε model, were done to predict the flow distribution of air coming out of a 33° angle
conic diffuser with various structures inside and choose the best one to be built and
studied experimentally. Structures inside the diffuser cone as well as honeycombs and
meshed screens were able to help even flow distribution to a certain degree. However,
the asymmetry of the flow caused by the 35° angle with which the air flow arrived at
the beginning of the conic diffuser was too significant to be evened out. The laboratory
wind generation system was used with a model version of the NREL 5 MW wind
turbine at scale 1:50, using blades with low Reynolds number aerodynamic profiles.
In spite of the asymmetry of the flow distribution, it showed that the model could be
used in Froude scaled environment with a wind speed only slightly higher than Froude
scaled wind to produce correct thrust. The wind generation system in combination with
the low Reynolds number wind turbine allowed to study in laboratory conditions wind
speeds corresponding to 13 m/s at full size on a model wind turbine.
Date of Award | 2023 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Martyn Hann (Other Supervisor) |
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- wind generation system
- OpenFOAM
- CFD simulation
- wind speed measurement
- turbulence models
- model wind turbine
- scaled hydrodynamic testing
- conical diffuser
- low Reynolds-number blades
- flow straighteners
- honeycombs
- meshed screens
Investigation of expanding diffuser based wind generation system for use in scaled hydrodynamic testing of floating offshore wind turbines
Guichard, J. (Author). 2023
Student thesis: PhD