Very-Large-Scale Motions in the Atmospheric Boundary Layer Educed by Snapshot Proper Orthogonal Decomposition

2014 ◽  
Vol 153 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stimit Shah ◽  
Elie Bou-Zeid
2017 ◽  
Vol 828 ◽  
pp. 175-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Ali ◽  
G. Cortina ◽  
N. Hamilton ◽  
M. Calaf ◽  
R. B. Cal

A large eddy simulation framework is used to explore the structure of the turbulent flow in a thermally stratified wind turbine array boundary layer. The flow field is driven by a constant geostrophic wind with time-varying surface boundary conditions obtained from a selected period of the CASES-99 field experiment. Proper orthogonal decomposition is used to extract coherent structures of the turbulent flow under the considered thermal stratification regimes. The flow structure is discussed in the context of three-dimensional representations of key modes, which demonstrate features ranging in size from the wind turbine wakes to the atmospheric boundary layer. Results demonstrate that structures related to the atmospheric boundary layer flow dominate over those introduced by the wind farm for the unstable and neutrally stratified regimes; large structures in atmospheric turbulence are beneficial for the wake recovery, and consequently the presence of the turbulent wind turbine wakes is diminished. Contrarily, the flow in the stably stratified case is fully dominated by the presence of the turbines and highly influenced by the Coriolis force. A comparative analysis of the test cases indicates that during the stable regime, higher-order modes contribute less to the overall character of the flow. Under neutral and unstable stratification, important turbulence dynamics are distributed over a larger range of basis functions. The influence of the wind turbines on the structure of the atmospheric boundary layer is mainly quantified via the turbulence kinetic energy of the first ten modes. Linking the new insights into structure of the wind turbine/atmospheric boundary layer and their interaction addressed here will benefit the formulation of new simplified models for commercial application.


Author(s):  
Tanmoy Chatterjee ◽  
Yulia T. Peet

Large scale coherent structures in atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) are known to contribute to the power generation in wind farms. In the current paper, we perform a detailed analysis of the large scale structures in a finite sized wind turbine canopy using modal analysis from three dimensional proper orthogonal decomposition (POD). While POD analysis sheds light on the large scale coherent modes and scaling laws of the eigenspectra, we also observe a slow convergence of the spectral trends with the available number of snapshots. Since the finite sized array is periodic in the spanwise direction, we propose to adapt a novel approach of performing POD analysis of the spanwise/lateral Fourier transformed velocity snapshots instead of the snapshots themselves. This methodology not only helps in decoupling the length scales in the spanwise and the streamwise direction when studying the energetic coherent modes, but also provides a detailed guidance towards understanding the convergence of the eigenspectra. In particular, the Fourier-POD eigenspectra helps us illustrate if the dominant scaling laws observed in 3D POD are actually contributed by the laterally wider or thinner structures and provide more detailed insight on the structures themselves. We use the database from our previous large eddy simulation (LES) studies on finite-sized wind farms which uses wall-modeled LES for modeling the Atmospheric boundary layer laws, and actuator lines for the turbine blades. Understanding the behaviour of such structures would not only help better assess reduced order models (ROM) for forecasting the flow and power generation but would also play a vital role in improving the decision making abilities in wind farm optimization algorithms in future. Additionally, this study also provides guidance for better understanding the POD analysis in the turbulence and wind farm community.


2019 ◽  
Vol 881 ◽  
pp. 23-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Soucasse ◽  
Bérengère Podvin ◽  
Philippe Rivière ◽  
Anouar Soufiani

This paper investigates the large-scale flow reorientations of Rayleigh–Bénard convection in a cubic cell using proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) analysis and modelling. A direct numerical simulation is performed for air at a Rayleigh number of $10^{7}$ and shows that the flow is characterized by four quasi-stable states, corresponding to a large-scale circulation lying in one of the two diagonal planes of the cube with a clockwise or anticlockwise motion, with occasional brief reorientations. Proper orthogonal decomposition is applied to the joint velocity and temperature fields of an enriched database which captures the statistical symmetries of the flow. We found that each quasi-stable state consists of a superposition of four spatial modes representing three types of structures: (i) a mean-flow mode consisting of two stacked counter-rotating torus-like structures; (ii) two large-scale two-dimensional rolls (pair of degenerated modes) which form large-scale diagonal rolls when combined together; and (iii) an eight-roll mode that transports fluid from one corner to the other and strengthens the circulation along the diagonal. In addition, we identified three other modes that play a role in the reorientation process: two boundary-layer modes (pair of degenerated modes) that connect the core region with the horizontal boundary layers and one mode associated with corner rolls. The symmetries of the different POD modes are discussed, as well as their temporal dynamics. A description of the reorientation process in terms of POD modes is provided and compared with other modal approaches available in the literature. Finally, Galerkin projection is used to derive a POD-based reduced-order model. Unresolved modes are accounted for in the model by an extra dissipation term and the addition of noise. A seven-mode model is able to reproduce the low-frequency dynamics of the large-scale reorientations as well as the high-frequency dynamics associated with the large-scale circulation rotation. Linear stability analysis and sensitivity analysis confirm the role of the boundary-layer modes and the corner-rolls mode in the reorientation process.


Author(s):  
Daryl Hickey ◽  
Luc Masset ◽  
Gaetan Kerschen ◽  
Olivier Bru¨ls

Analysing large scale, nonlinear, multiphysical, dynamical structures, by using mathematical modelling and simulation, e.g. Finite Element Modelling (FEM), can be computationally very expensive, especially if the number of degrees-of-freedom is high. This paper develops modal reduction techniques for such nonlinear multiphysical systems. The paper focuses on Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD), a multivariate statistical method that obtains a compact representation of a data set by reducing a large number of interdependent variables to a much smaller number of uncorrelated variables. A fully coupled, thermomechanical model consisting of a multilayered, cantilever beam is described and analysed. This linear benchmark is then extended by adding nonlinear radiative heat exchanges between the beam and an enclosing box. The radiative view factors, present in the equations governing the heat fluxes between beam and box elements, are obtained with a ray-tracing method. A reduction procedure is proposed for this fully coupled nonlinear, multiphysical, thermomechanical system. Two alternative approaches to the reduction are investigated, a monolithic approach incorporating a scaling factor to the equations, and a partitioned approach that treats the individual physical modes separately. The paper builds on previous work presented previously by the authors. The results are given for the RMS error between either approach and the original, full solution.


Author(s):  
Shufan Hu ◽  
Chen Zhang ◽  
Hong Liu ◽  
Fuxin Wang

This paper studied the unsteadiness of vortex motion produced by a three-dimensional wing section with horn/ridge ice contamination. Using improved delayed detached eddy simulation method, multi-scale vortex and their associated flow structures were successfully captured. Results have shown a diversity of unsteadiness scales at different time series, including shear layer instability, vortex pairing, co-rotating and breaking up. Proper orthogonal decomposition was then introduced to extract the characteristic vortex shedding modes with scheduling the eigenvalues λi from large to small. The dominate and secondary proper orthogonal decomposition modes under horn ice condition were displayed, which could be illustrated as fluctuations near recirculation zone, and large-scale vortex shedding/reattaching motion, respectively. The proper orthogonal decomposition modal characteristics for ridge ice showed that vortex scales varied from large to small. The trajectory of large-scale vortex reattaching and co-rotating exist simultaneously with the pressure peak and recover, which also verified the association of proper orthogonal decomposition modes with different scales of vortices. Future works would be presented on demonstration of the complex structures and the dynamic features in such flow.


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