Title :
Independent pitch control using rotor position feedback for wind-shear and gravity fatigue reduction in a wind turbine
Author :
Trudnowski, Daniel ; LeMieux, David
Author_Institution :
Eng. Dept., Montana Tech., Butte, MT, USA
Abstract :
In large-scale horizontal-axis wind turbines, turbulence, gravity, and wind shear effects make the effective forces on turbine blades vary considerably. These varying conditions result in significant blade vibration fatigue loading. In this paper, two separate realtime control algorithms are studied; the goal of each algorithm is to reduce blade fatigue cycle amplitudes caused by wind shear and gravity effects. Each algorithm adds a modulation signal to a blade´s pitch angle based on the rotational position of the rotor; rotor position is used as the feedback signal as it relatively easy to measure. One algorithm focuses on reducing flatwise loading while the other focuses on edgewise loading. The algorithms are derived and analyzed based on a simplified 4th-order dynamic model of a blade. Evaluation of the flatwise controller shows it holds good potential for providing loading reduction; similar analysis shows the edgewise algorithm cannot provide realistic load reduction. The flatwise control strategy is then applied to a highly-detailed computer simulation model of a 1.5-MW machine using the ADAMS/WT finite-element simulation tool. The simulation results demonstrate that the control algorithm can significantly reduce flatwise fatigue loading for a large machine with very little affect on the machines power output and tower oscillations.
Keywords :
control system analysis computing; control system synthesis; fatigue; finite element analysis; nonlinear control systems; position control; vibrations; wind turbines; 1.5 MW; ADAMS/WT finite-element simulation tool; blade fatigue cycle amplitudes; blade pitch angle; blade vibration fatigue loading; computer simulation model; edgewise algorithm; edgewise loading reduction; flatwise loading reduction; fourth-order dynamic model; gravity fatigue reduction; independent pitch control; large-scale horizontal-axis wind turbines; modulation signal; nonlinear control algorithm; power output; real-time control algorithms; rotor position feedback; tower oscillations; turbine blades; variable-speed control; wind turbine; wind-shear fatigue reduction; Algorithm design and analysis; Blades; Computational modeling; Computer simulation; Fatigue; Feedback; Gravity; Large-scale systems; Position measurement; Wind turbines;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference, 2002. Proceedings of the 2002
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7298-0
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2002.1025328