scholarly journals Numerical Analysis of a Gravity Substructure for 5 MW Offshore Wind Turbines Due to Soil Conditions

2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Su Park ◽  
Youn-Ju Jeong ◽  
Young-Jun You
2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 169-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Su Park ◽  
Youn-Ju Jeong ◽  
Young-Jun You ◽  
Du-Ho Lee ◽  
Byeong-Cheol Kim

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 1835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yolanda Vidal ◽  
Gabriela Aquino ◽  
Francesc Pozo ◽  
José Eligio Moisés Gutiérrez-Arias

Structural health monitoring for offshore wind turbines is imperative. Offshore wind energy is progressively attained at greater water depths, beyond 30 m, where jacket foundations are presently the best solution to cope with the harsh environment (extreme sites with poor soil conditions). Structural integrity is of key importance in these underwater structures. In this work, a methodology for the diagnosis of structural damage in jacket-type foundations is stated. The method is based on the criterion that any damage or structural change produces variations in the vibrational response of the structure. Most studies in this area are, primarily, focused on the case of measurable input excitation and vibration response signals. Nevertheless, in this paper it is assumed that the only available excitation, the wind, is not measurable. Therefore, using vibration-response-only accelerometer information, a data-driven approach is developed following the next steps: (i) the wind is simulated as a Gaussian white noise and the accelerometer data are collected; (ii) the data are pre-processed using group-reshape and column-scaling; (iii) principal component analysis is used for both linear dimensionality reduction and feature extraction; finally, (iv) two different machine-learning algorithms, k nearest neighbor (k-NN) and quadratic-kernel support vector machine (SVM), are tested as classifiers. The overall accuracy is estimated by 5-fold cross-validation. The proposed approach is experimentally validated in a laboratory small-scale structure. The results manifest the reliability of the stated fault diagnosis method being the best performance given by the SVM classifier.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 822-834 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruiqi Hu ◽  
Puyang Zhang ◽  
Hongyan Ding ◽  
Conghuan Le

Author(s):  
Min-Su Park ◽  
Youn-Ju Jeong ◽  
Young-Jun You ◽  
Du-Ho Lee ◽  
Byeong-Cheol Kim

In order to increase the gross generation of wind turbines, the size of a tower and a rotor-nacelle becomes larger. In other words, the substructure for offshore wind turbines is strongly influenced by the effect of wave forces as the size of substructure increases. In addition, since a large offshore wind turbine has a heavy dead load, the reaction forces on the substructure become severe, thus very firm foundations should be required. Therefore, the dynamic soil-structure interaction has to be fully considered and the wave acting on substructure accurately calculated. In the present study ANSYS AQWA is used to evaluate the wave forces. The wave forces and wave run up on the substructure are presented for various wave conditions. Moreover, the substructure method is applied to evaluate the effect of soil-structure interaction. Using the wave forces and stiffness and damping matrices obtained from this study, the structural analysis of the gravity substructure is carried out through ANSYS mechanical. The structural behaviors of the strength and deformation are evaluated to investigate an ultimate structural safety and serviceability of gravity substructure for various soil conditions. Also, the modal analysis is carried out to investigate the resonance between the wind turbine and the gravity substructure.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiqiu Zhong ◽  
Wuxu Li ◽  
Rui Yin

Abstract Background: Grouted connection sections are widely used to connect the support structure of offshore wind turbines to the foundation, and their mechanical performance is crucial to the reliability of the whole wind turbine. In order to find a suitable stress evaluation method for the grouted connection section, finite element simulation analysis is conducted in this paper.Methods: The stress analysis of the grouted connection section under different frequency loads was explored by establishing a scaled-down model and numerical analysis, and the influence of various parameters on the mechanical properties of the connection section was investigated and its engineering applicability was evaluated.Results: The results of scaling tests and numerical analysis showed that the specimens without shear keys in the axial direction had the worst engineering practicality, and the specimens with shear keys in the taper had the best engineering applicability.Conclusions: The results of the reduced-scale tests and numerical analysis can provide a reference for the design of grouted joint sections, and the relationship between them can be applied to the preliminary evaluation of the mechanical properties of grouted joint sections under low circumferential repeated loads.


Author(s):  
Kimon Argyriadis ◽  
Marcus Klose

The paper presents the necessary considerations for the determination of design loads for offshore wind turbines (OWTs) and OWT support structures. The design of OWTs strongly depends on the environmental conditions such as wind and wave data, ambient temperatures and soil conditions. Load analyses for OWTs are generally done using sophisticated simulation tools which consider the turbulent wind conditions as well as the structural dynamics and the operational behavior of the turbine. Compared to wind turbines onshore, wave loads are an additional element that needs to be considered. Experience shows that the natural frequencies of the support structure highly influence the design loads on the system due to excitation by the rotor. Therefore, the load analysis in combination with optimization of the support structure is an iterative process. A close cooperation between the designing engineers of turbine and support structure is definitely required. The calculation procedure will be presented as well as results from a sample calculation for a typical configuration.


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