Guidelines for reducing dynamic loads in two-bladed teetering-hub downwind wind turbines.

A major goal of the federal Wind Energy Program is the rapid development and validation of structural models to determine loads and response for a wide variety of different wind turbine configurations operating under extreme conditions. Such codes are crucial to the successful design of future advan...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: United States. Department of Energy. Office of Scientific and Technical Information
Language:English
Published: Oak Ridge, Tenn. : Distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy, 1995.
Subjects:
Online Access:
Physical Description:12 pages
Format: Electronic eBook
Description
Abstract:
A major goal of the federal Wind Energy Program is the rapid development and validation of structural models to determine loads and response for a wide variety of different wind turbine configurations operating under extreme conditions. Such codes are crucial to the successful design of future advanced wind turbines. In previous papers the authors described steps they took to develop a model of a two-bladed teetering-hub downwind wind turbine using ADAMS{reg_sign} (Automatic Dynamic Analysis of Mechanical Systems), as well as comparison of model predictions to test data. In this paper they show the use of this analytical model to study the influence of various turbine parameters on predicted system loads. They concentrate their study on turbine response in the frequency range of six to ten times the rotor rotational frequency (6P to 10P). Their goal is to identify the most important parameters which influence the response of this type of machine in this frequency range and give turbine designers some general design guidelines for designing two-bladed teetering-hub machines to be less susceptible to vibration. They study the effects of such parameters as blade edgewise and flapwise stiffness, tower top stiffness, blade tip-brake mass, low-speed shaft stiffness, nacelle mass momenta of inertia, and rotor speed. They show which parameters can be varied in order to make the turbine less responsive to such atmospheric inputs as wind shear and tower shadow. They then give designers a set of design guidelines in order to show how these machines can be designed to be less responsive to these inputs.
Note:DOE Technical report.
Published through the Information Bridge: DOE Scientific and Technical Information.
"NREL/TP--442-7812"
" DE95009252"
Wright, A.D.; Bir, G.S.; Butterfield, C.D.
National Renewable Energy Lab., Golden, CO (United States)
United States. Dept. of Energy. Washington, DC (United States)
Electronic resource.
Call Number:E 1.99:NREL/TP--442-7812
System Details:Available via the World Wide Web.