Aeroservoelastic state-space vortex lattice modeling and load alleviation of wind turbine blades. Ng, B. F., Hesse, H., Palacios, R., Graham, J. M. R., & Kerrigan, E. C. Wind Energy, 18(7):1317–1331, 2015. _eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/we.1752
Aeroservoelastic state-space vortex lattice modeling and load alleviation of wind turbine blades [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
AbstractAn aeroservoelastic model, capturing the structural response and the unsteady aerodynamics of turbine rotors, will be used to demonstrate the potential of active load alleviation using aerodynamic control surfaces. The structural model is a geometrically non-linear composite beam, which is linearized around equilibrium rotating conditions and coupled with time-domain aerodynamics given by a linearized 3D unsteady vortex lattice method. With much of the existing work relying on blade element momentum theory with various corrections, the use of the unsteady vortex lattice method in this paper seeks to complement and provide a direct higher fidelity solution for the unsteady rotor dynamics in attached flow conditions. The resulting aeroelastic model is in a state-space formulation suitable for control synthesis. Flaps are modeled directly in the vortex lattice description and using a reduced-order model of the coupled aeroelastic formulation, a linear-quadratic-Gaussian controller is synthesized and shown to reduce root mean square values of the root-bending moment and tip deflection in the presence of continuous turbulence. Similar trend is obtained when the controller is applied to the original non-linear model of the turbine. Trade-offs between reducing root-bending moment and suppressing the negative impacts on torsion due to flap deployment will also be investigated. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
@article{ng_aeroservoelastic_2015,
	title = {Aeroservoelastic state-space vortex lattice modeling and load alleviation of wind turbine blades},
	volume = {18},
	copyright = {Copyright © 2014 John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd.},
	issn = {1099-1824},
	url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/we.1752},
	doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/we.1752},
	abstract = {AbstractAn aeroservoelastic model, capturing the structural response and the unsteady aerodynamics of turbine rotors, will be used to demonstrate the potential of active load alleviation using aerodynamic control surfaces. The structural model is a geometrically non-linear composite beam, which is linearized around equilibrium rotating conditions and coupled with time-domain aerodynamics given by a linearized 3D unsteady vortex lattice method. With much of the existing work relying on blade element momentum theory with various corrections, the use of the unsteady vortex lattice method in this paper seeks to complement and provide a direct higher fidelity solution for the unsteady rotor dynamics in attached flow conditions. The resulting aeroelastic model is in a state-space formulation suitable for control synthesis. Flaps are modeled directly in the vortex lattice description and using a reduced-order model of the coupled aeroelastic formulation, a linear-quadratic-Gaussian controller is synthesized and shown to reduce root mean square values of the root-bending moment and tip deflection in the presence of continuous turbulence. Similar trend is obtained when the controller is applied to the original non-linear model of the turbine. Trade-offs between reducing root-bending moment and suppressing the negative impacts on torsion due to flap deployment will also be investigated. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd.},
	language = {en},
	number = {7},
	urldate = {2020-11-11},
	journal = {Wind Energy},
	author = {Ng, Bing Feng and Hesse, Henrik and Palacios, Rafael and Graham, J. Michael R. and Kerrigan, Eric C.},
	year = {2015},
	note = {\_eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/we.1752},
	keywords = {aeroelasticity, beams, blades, controls, flaps, vortex panel},
	pages = {1317--1331},
}

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