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  4. OC5 Project Phase II: Validation of global loads of the DeepCwind floating semisubmersible wind turbine
 
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2017
Journal Article
Title

OC5 Project Phase II: Validation of global loads of the DeepCwind floating semisubmersible wind turbine

Abstract
This paper summarizes the findings from Phase II of the Offshore Code Comparison, Collaboration, Continued, with Correlation project. The project is run under the International Energy Agency Wind Research Task 30, and is focused on validating the tools used for modeling offshore wind systems through the comparison of simulated responses of select system designs to physical test data. Validation activities such as these lead to improvement of offshore wind modeling tools, which will enable the development of more innovative and cost-effective offshore wind designs. For Phase II of the project, numerical models of the DeepCwind floating semisubmersible wind system were validated using measurement data from a 1/50th-scale validation campaign performed at the Maritime Research Institute Netherlands offshore wave basin. Validation of the models was performed by comparing the calculated ultimate and fatigue loads for eight different wave-only and combined wind/wave test cases against the measured data, after calibration was performed using free-decay, wind-only, and wave-only tests. The results show a decent estimation of both the ultimate and fatigue loads for the simulated results, but with a fairly consistent underestimation in the tower and upwind mooring line loads that can be attributed to an underestimation of wave-excitation forces outside the linear wave-excitation region, and the presence of broadband frequency excitation in the experimental measurements from wind. Participant results showed varied agreement with the experimental measurements based on the modeling approach used. Modeling attributes that enabled better agreement included: the use of a dynamic mooring model; wave stretching, or some other hydrodynamic modeling approach that excites frequencies outside the linear wave region; nonlinear wave kinematics models; and unsteady aerodynamics models. Also, it was observed that a Morison-only hydrodynamic modeling approach could create excessive pitch excitation and resulting tower loads in some frequency bands.
Author(s)
Robertson, Amy N.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Wendt, Fabian
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Jonkman, Jason M.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Popko, Wojciech
Fraunhofer-Institut für Windenergiesysteme IWES  
Dagher, Habib
University of Maine
Gueydon, Sebastien
Maritime Research Institute Netherlands
Qvist, Jacob
4Subsea
Vittori, Felipe
CENER
Azcona, José
CENER
Uzunoglu, Emre
CENTEC
Guedes Soares, Carlos
CENTEC
Harries, Rob
DNV GL
Yde, Anders
Technical University of Denmark
Galinos, Christos
Technical University of Denmark
Hermans, Koen
European Centre of the Netherlands
Vaal, Jacobus Bernardus de
Institute for Energy Technology
Bozonnet, Pauline
IFP Energies nouvelles
Bouy, Ludovic
PRINCIPIA
Bayati, Ilmas
Politecnico di Milano
Bergua, Roger
Siemens PLM
Galvan, Josean
Tecnalia
Mendikoa, Iñigo
Tecnalia
Barrera Sanchez, Carlos
Universidad de Cantabria
Shin, Hyunkyoung
University of Ulsan
Oh, Sho
University of Tokyo
Molins, Climent
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
Debruyne, Yannick
WavEC Offshore Renewables
Journal
Energy Procedia  
Conference
Deep Sea Offshore Wind R&D Conference (DeepWind) 2017  
Open Access
DOI
10.1016/j.egypro.2017.10.333
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Windenergiesysteme IWES  
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