About

Log in?

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Anyone can log in and get personalized features such as favorites, tags and feeds.

Log in as DTU user Log in as non-DTU user No thanks

DTU Findit

Journal article

Turbulence characterization from a forward-looking nacelle lidar

From

Department of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark1

Meteorology & Remote Sensing, Department of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark2

Wind Turbine Structures and Component Design, Department of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark3

We present two methods to characterize turbulence in the turbine inflow using radial velocity measurements from nacelle-mounted lidars. The first uses a model of the three-dimensional spectral velocity tensor combined with a model of the spatial radial velocity averaging of the lidars, and the second uses the ensembleaveraged Doppler radial velocity spectrum.

With the former, filtered turbulence estimates can be predicted, whereas the latter model-free method allows us to estimate unfiltered turbulence measures. Two types of forwardlooking nacelle lidars are investigated: a pulsed system that uses a five-beam configuration and a continuouswave system that scans conically.

For both types of lidars, we show how the radial velocity spectra of the lidar beams are influenced by turbulence characteristics, and how to extract the velocity-tensor parameters that are useful to predict the loads on a turbine. We also show how the velocity-component variances and co-variances can be estimated from the radial-velocity unfiltered variances of the lidar beams.

We demonstrate the methods using measurements from an experiment conducted at the Nørrekær Enge wind farm in northern Denmark, where both types of lidars were installed on the nacelle of a wind turbine. Comparison of the lidar-based along-wind unfiltered variances with those from a cup anemometer installed on a meteorological mast close to the turbine shows a bias of just 2 %.

The ratios of the unfiltered and filtered radial velocity variances of the lidar beams to the cup-anemometer variances are well predicted by the spectral model. However, other lidar-derived estimates of velocity-component variances and co-variances do not agree with those from a sonic anemometer on the mast, which we mostly attribute to the small cone angle of the lidar.

The velocity-tensor parameters derived from sonic-anemometer velocity spectra and those derived from lidar radial velocity spectra agree well under both near-neutral atmospheric stability and high wind-speed conditions, with differences increasing with decreasing wind speed and increasing stability.

We also partly attribute these differences to the lidar beam configuration.

Language: English
Publisher: Copernicus Publications
Year: 2017
Pages: 133-152
ISSN: 23667451 and 23667443
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.5194/wes-2-133-2017
ORCIDs: Peña, Alfredo , Mann, Jakob and Dimitrov, Nikolay Krasimirov

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Log in as DTU user

Access

Analysis