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Active Control Systems for Wind Turbines

Active Control Systems for Wind Turbines. Avishek Kumar Supervisor: Dr Karl Stol The University of Auckland. Overview. Wind Turbines Power Extraction Traditional Control Modern Control Future of Control. Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines. Source: US Department of Energy.

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Active Control Systems for Wind Turbines

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  1. Active Control Systems for Wind Turbines Avishek Kumar Supervisor: Dr Karl Stol The University of Auckland

  2. Overview • Wind Turbines • Power Extraction • Traditional Control • Modern Control • Future of Control

  3. Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines Source: US Department of Energy

  4. Large Wind Turbines • 5MW (1400-1500 households) • 126m Blade Span • 12.1 rpm • Power controlled by blade pitch • Onshore and offshore

  5. Torque Control Pitch Control Power Capture Power [kW] Pwind  w3 Ideal turbine (max. 60% efficient) Prated Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Wind Speed, w [m/s] wcut-out wcut-in wrated Source: Dr. Karl Stol, UoA

  6. Power Generation Control Objectives • Region 1: • Turbine is stopped • Region 2: • Maintain constant tip speed ratio to produce maximum power below rated wind speed. • Region 3: • Maintain rated rotor speed and power. Power Coefficent, Cp (Blade Tip Speed)/Wind Speed, λ

  7. Classical Control • Use collective pitch and/or generator torque to adjust rotor speed depending on the region. • The torque and pitch controllers work separately.

  8. Loads • Become more significant as turbines get larger • By reducing loads we can also decrease cost of energy by: • Increasing the lifetime of turbines • Reducing structural material • Reducing maintenance

  9. Loads • High Winds • Stochastic Winds • Vertical Wind Shear and Cross Winds • Inertia and Gravity • Tower Interference • Wind Turbulence and Gusts Source: E Hau

  10. Modern Control Traditional Control Modern Control Single control objective Multiple control objective Multi input multi output Single input single output Controllers work separately Single centralised controller

  11. Modern Control Objectives for the Wind Turbine • Maintain Rotor Speed • Keep the best tip speed ratios in Region 2 • Not exceed rated velocity in Region 3 • Have smooth power output • Reducing DYNAMIC loading on the turbine. • Blade flap • Tower fore-aft vibration • Drive train torsional vibration

  12. Individual Blade Pitching • With modern control (MIMO) we can control the load on each blade individually • This now allows mitigation of ASSYMETRIC loading: • Wind shear • Tower shadow • Inertial loads • Turbulence across the swept area

  13. Simulation Results Stol, Zhao, Wright (2006), Individual Blade Pitch Control for the Controls Advanced Research Turbine (CART), J. of Solar Energy Eng., Transactions of the ASME, v 128, n 4, Nov, 2006, p 498-505

  14. The Problems Model based control tresats a nonlinear system as a linear one y x

  15. The Solution Allows control over the entire operating envelope More predictable behaviour Nonlinear Control Increase in the performance of control Increase in safety

  16. Current State of Nonlinear Control • Variety of nonlinear controllers are being explored • Simulations show successful SISO power control • Very little work has been conducted with multiple control objectives systems • No work has been conducted (publicly) with Individual Blade Pitching

  17. My Research • What: • Nonlinear control • Individual blade pitching • Multiple control objectives • Why: • Reduce cost of energy • More predictable turbine behaviour • Safer turbine behaviour

  18. Summary • Wind turbines are getting bigger • Loads are increasing cost of energy • Modern control (Linear) can mitigate loads AND maintain rated power • Using individual blade pitch we can mitigate ASSYMETRIC loads • Modern Linear Control is only optimal about it’s operating region • Nonlinear control aims to apply all the above benefits over the entire operating envelope

  19. Questions?

  20. Wind Energy Facts • Wind accounts for currently 2% of our electricity. • Global increase of 25% a year for the last 5 years. • 321 MW either running or being commissioned in NZ. • Current COE is 5.5-7c/kWhr (2005) New Zealand Wind Energy Association. (2007, June 28 - last update). [Online]. Available: http://www.windenergy.org.nz/ [2007, July 11]

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