Wind farm layout optimization can greatly improve wind farm performance. However, past wind farm design has been limited in several ways. Wind farm design usually assumes that all the turbines throughout the farm should be exactly the same. Oftentimes, the location of every turbine is optimized individually, which is computationally expensive. Furthermore, designers fail to consider turbine loads during layout optimization. This dissertation presents four studies which provide partial solutions to these limitations and greatly improve wind farm layout optimization. Two studies explore differing turbine designs in wind farms. In these studies, Wind farm layouts are optimized simultaneously with turbine design. We found that for small rotor diameters and closely spaced wind turbines, wind farms with different heights have a 5–10% reduction in cost of energy compared to farms with all the same turbine height. Coupled optimization of turbine layout and full turbine design results in an 2–5% reduction in cost of energy compared to optimizing sequentially for wind farms with turbine spacings of 8.5–11 rotor diameters. Wind farms with tighter spacing benefit even more from coupled optimization. Furthermore, we found that heterogeneous turbine design can produce up to an additional 10% cost of energy reduction compared to wind farms with identical turbines throughout the farm, especially when the wind turbines are closely spaced. The third study presents the boundary-grid parameterization method to reduce the computational expense of optimizing wind farms. This parameterization uses only five variables to define the layout of a wind farm with any number of turbines. For a 100 turbine wind farm, we show that optimizing the five variables of the boundary-grid method produces wind farms that perform just as well as farms where the location of each turbine is optimized individually, which requires 200 design variables. The presented method facilitates the study for both gradient-free and gradient-based optimization of large wind farms. The final study presents a model to calculate fatigue damage caused by partial waking on a wind turbine which is computationally efficient and can be included in wind farm layout optimization. Compared to high fidelity simulation data, the model accurately predicts the damage trends of various waking conditions. We also perform a wind farm layout optimization with the presented model in which we maximize the annual energy production of a wind farm while constraining the damage of each turbine. The results of the optimization show that the turbine damage can be constrained with only a very small sacrifice of less than 1% to the annual energy production.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:BGMYU2/oai:scholarsarchive.byu.edu:etd-9692 |
Date | 12 August 2020 |
Creators | Stanley, Andrew P. J. |
Publisher | BYU ScholarsArchive |
Source Sets | Brigham Young University |
Detected Language | English |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | Theses and Dissertations |
Rights | https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ |
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