Computation of Nonlinear Hydrodynamic Loads on Floating Wind Turbines Using Fluid-Impulse Theory

A hydrodynamics computer module was developed to evaluate the linear and nonlinear loads on floating wind turbines using a new fluid-impulse formulation for coupling with the FAST program. The new formulation allows linear and nonlinear loads on floating bodies to be computed in the time domain. It...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Volume 9: Ocean Renewable Energy
Main Authors: Jonkman, Jason, Hayman, Gregory, Chan, Godine Kok Yan, Sclavounos, Paul D
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109579
Description
Summary:A hydrodynamics computer module was developed to evaluate the linear and nonlinear loads on floating wind turbines using a new fluid-impulse formulation for coupling with the FAST program. The new formulation allows linear and nonlinear loads on floating bodies to be computed in the time domain. It also avoids the computationally intensive evaluation of temporal and spatial gradients of the velocity potential in the Bernoulli equation and the discretization of the nonlinear free surface. The new hydrodynamics module computes linear and nonlinear loads — including hydrostatic, Froude-Krylov, radiation and diffraction, as well as nonlinear effects known to cause ringing, springing, and slow-drift loads — directly in the time domain. The time-domain Green function is used to solve the linear and nonlinear free-surface problems and efficient methods are derived for its computation. The body instantaneous wetted surface is approximated by a panel mesh and the discretization of the free surface is circumvented by using the Green function. The evaluation of the nonlinear loads is based on explicit expressions derived by the fluid-impulse theory, which can be computed efficiently. Computations are presented of the linear and nonlinear loads on the MIT/NREL tension-leg platform. Comparisons were carried out with frequency-domain linear and second-order methods. Emphasis was placed on modeling accuracy of the magnitude of nonlinear low- and high-frequency wave loads in a sea state. Although fluid-impulse theory is applied to floating wind turbines in this paper, the theory is applicable to other offshore platforms as well. United States. Department of Energy (National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Contract DE-AC36-08GO28308) United States. Department of Energy. Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Wind and Water Power Technologies Office Massachusetts Clean Energy Center