Robust Uncertainty Quantification through Integration of Distributed Gauss-Newton Optimization with Gaussian Mixture Model and Parallelized Sampling Algorithms

Author(s):  
Guohua Gao ◽  
Jeroen C. Vink ◽  
Chaohui Chen ◽  
Mariela Araujo ◽  
Benjamin Ramirez ◽  
...  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaodong Zhang ◽  
Anand Natarajan

Abstract. Uncertainty quantification is a necessary step in wind turbine design due to the random nature of the environmental loads, through which the uncertainty of structural loads and responses under specific situations can be quantified. Specifically, wind turbulence has a significant impact on the extreme and fatigue design envelope of the wind turbine. The wind parameters (mean and standard deviation of 10-minute wind speed) are usually not independent, and it will lead to biased results for structural reliability or uncertainty quantification assuming the wind parameters are independent. A proper probabilistic model should be established to model the correlation among wind parameters. Compared to univariate distributions, theoretical multivariate distributions are limited and not flexible enough to model the wind parameters from different sites or direction sectors. Copula-based models are used often for correlation description, but existing parametric copulas may not model the correlation among wind parameters well due to limitations of the copula structures. The Gaussian mixture model is widely applied for density estimation and clustering in many domains, but limited studies were conducted in wind energy and few used it for density estimation of wind parameters. In this paper, the Gaussian mixture model is used to model the joint distribution of mean and standard deviation of 10-minute wind speed, which is calculated from 15 years of wind measurement time series data. As a comparison, the Nataf transformation (Gaussian copula) and Gumbel copula are compared with the Gaussian mixture model in terms of the estimated marginal distributions and conditional distributions. The Gaussian mixture model is then adopted to estimate the extreme wind turbulence, which could be taken as an input to design loads used in the ultimate design limit state of turbine structures. The wind turbulence associated with a 50-year return period computed from the Gaussian mixture model is compared with what is utilized in the design of wind turbines as given in the IEC 61400-1.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 663-681
Author(s):  
Guohua Gao ◽  
Hao Jiang ◽  
Jeroen C. Vink ◽  
Chaohui Chen ◽  
Yaakoub El Khamra ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 642
Author(s):  
Guichao Lin ◽  
Yunchao Tang ◽  
Xiangjun Zou ◽  
Qing Zhang ◽  
Xiaojie Shi ◽  
...  

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