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Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines. / Attene, Federico; Balduzzi, Francesco; Bianchini, Alessandro et al.
The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021. EWTEC, 2021. p. 2110-1-2110-10 (Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Attene, F, Balduzzi, F, Bianchini, A & Campobasso, S 2021, Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines. in The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021. Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference, EWTEC, pp. 2110-1-2110-10, European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference, Plymouth, United Kingdom, 5/09/21.

APA

Attene, F., Balduzzi, F., Bianchini, A., & Campobasso, S. (2021). Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines. In The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021 (pp. 2110-1-2110-10). (Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference). EWTEC.

Vancouver

Attene F, Balduzzi F, Bianchini A, Campobasso S. Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines. In The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021. EWTEC. 2021. p. 2110-1-2110-10. (Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference).

Author

Attene, Federico ; Balduzzi, Francesco ; Bianchini, Alessandro et al. / Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines. The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021. EWTEC, 2021. pp. 2110-1-2110-10 (Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{5a52649f61e94251baa0bb5118092f72,
title = "Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines",
abstract = "Reliably predicting turbine/wake interactions in arrays of tidal stream turbines is paramount to reducing losses of energy yield by optimizing array layout at the design stage. This study focuses on the analysis of turbine performance and rotor wakes based on Navier-Stokes computational fluid dynamics, discussing modeling aspects associated with the method used for incorporating turbine hydrodynamics and turbulent flow effects in simulations. Important factors considered herein are a) the impact of laminar-to-turbulent transition of the blade boundary layers on rotor performance, and b) the sensitivity of the computed wake evolution on the turbine modeling approach. For these analyses, the results of rotor resolved and generalized actuator disk solutions are compared to flume tank measured data of a model turbine performance and wake. The overall agreement of all computed solutions and measured data is good. In the presented Reynoldsaveraged Navier-Stokes analyses, the rotor-resolved analysis predicts the measured rotor wake up to about four rotor diameters behind the turbine well, and seemingly better than the actuator disk model, as expected; thereafter, however, the rotor resolved simulation dissipates the wake more slowly than observed in the experiment, whereas the wake recovery rate predicted by the actuator disk analysis is closer to measured data. The cross-comparison of the geometry resolved analyses and measured data indicate that the blade boundary layers are likely to be fully turbulent, which has a significant detrimental impact on the turbine power. It is also found that the time-averaged solution of the time-dependent analysis and that of the steady flow analysis of the turbine resolved flow field, differ negligibly, as noted in other recent studies.",
author = "Federico Attene and Francesco Balduzzi and Alessandro Bianchini and Sergio Campobasso",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "6",
language = "English",
series = "Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference",
publisher = "EWTEC",
pages = "2110--1--2110--10",
booktitle = "The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021",
note = "European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference, EWTEC ; Conference date: 05-09-2021 Through 09-09-2021",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Rotor performance, blade loads, and wake resolution in Navier-Stokes CFD of tidal stream turbines

AU - Attene, Federico

AU - Balduzzi, Francesco

AU - Bianchini, Alessandro

AU - Campobasso, Sergio

N1 - Conference code: 14

PY - 2021/9/6

Y1 - 2021/9/6

N2 - Reliably predicting turbine/wake interactions in arrays of tidal stream turbines is paramount to reducing losses of energy yield by optimizing array layout at the design stage. This study focuses on the analysis of turbine performance and rotor wakes based on Navier-Stokes computational fluid dynamics, discussing modeling aspects associated with the method used for incorporating turbine hydrodynamics and turbulent flow effects in simulations. Important factors considered herein are a) the impact of laminar-to-turbulent transition of the blade boundary layers on rotor performance, and b) the sensitivity of the computed wake evolution on the turbine modeling approach. For these analyses, the results of rotor resolved and generalized actuator disk solutions are compared to flume tank measured data of a model turbine performance and wake. The overall agreement of all computed solutions and measured data is good. In the presented Reynoldsaveraged Navier-Stokes analyses, the rotor-resolved analysis predicts the measured rotor wake up to about four rotor diameters behind the turbine well, and seemingly better than the actuator disk model, as expected; thereafter, however, the rotor resolved simulation dissipates the wake more slowly than observed in the experiment, whereas the wake recovery rate predicted by the actuator disk analysis is closer to measured data. The cross-comparison of the geometry resolved analyses and measured data indicate that the blade boundary layers are likely to be fully turbulent, which has a significant detrimental impact on the turbine power. It is also found that the time-averaged solution of the time-dependent analysis and that of the steady flow analysis of the turbine resolved flow field, differ negligibly, as noted in other recent studies.

AB - Reliably predicting turbine/wake interactions in arrays of tidal stream turbines is paramount to reducing losses of energy yield by optimizing array layout at the design stage. This study focuses on the analysis of turbine performance and rotor wakes based on Navier-Stokes computational fluid dynamics, discussing modeling aspects associated with the method used for incorporating turbine hydrodynamics and turbulent flow effects in simulations. Important factors considered herein are a) the impact of laminar-to-turbulent transition of the blade boundary layers on rotor performance, and b) the sensitivity of the computed wake evolution on the turbine modeling approach. For these analyses, the results of rotor resolved and generalized actuator disk solutions are compared to flume tank measured data of a model turbine performance and wake. The overall agreement of all computed solutions and measured data is good. In the presented Reynoldsaveraged Navier-Stokes analyses, the rotor-resolved analysis predicts the measured rotor wake up to about four rotor diameters behind the turbine well, and seemingly better than the actuator disk model, as expected; thereafter, however, the rotor resolved simulation dissipates the wake more slowly than observed in the experiment, whereas the wake recovery rate predicted by the actuator disk analysis is closer to measured data. The cross-comparison of the geometry resolved analyses and measured data indicate that the blade boundary layers are likely to be fully turbulent, which has a significant detrimental impact on the turbine power. It is also found that the time-averaged solution of the time-dependent analysis and that of the steady flow analysis of the turbine resolved flow field, differ negligibly, as noted in other recent studies.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

T3 - Proceedings of the European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference

SP - 2110-1-2110-10

BT - The 14th European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference (EWTEC) 2021

PB - EWTEC

T2 - European Wave and Tidal Energy Conference

Y2 - 5 September 2021 through 9 September 2021

ER -