A blind test on wind turbine wake modelling based on wind tunnel experiments

Phase I - The benchmark case

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

V. Pappa (National Technical University of Athens)

F. Campagnolo (Technische Universität München)

S. Tamaro (Technische Universität München)

F. Mühle (Technische Universität München)

J. Stegmüller (Technische Universität München)

A. Croce (Politecnico di Milano)

C. Gromke (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)

V. Riziotis (National Technical University of Athens)

A. Sciacchitano (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)

More Authors (External organisation)

Research Group
Aerodynamics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/2767/9/092053
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Aerodynamics
Issue number
9
Volume number
2767
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Wind turbine wake and modelling is crucial to optimizing future wind farm layouts and hence reducing the cost of energy. This paper presents the first phase of a blind test on modelling controlled and uncontrolled wind turbine wakes. The blind test is based on wind tunnel experiments of two model scale wind turbines (D = 1.1 m) one downstream of the other. The exercise is split into two phases and the first one is presented here, where participants are invited to simulate the baseline case, in which both turbines are aligned with the flow and there is no control on the either turbine. The objective of this phase is to ensure all participants can benchmark their numerical approach against a baseline open data set, where no wake control is applied. Experimental measurements include inflow velocity, turbine power and loads for a range of tip speed ratios. In the second phase, not presented here, the wake of the upstream turbine will be controlled and the performance of the downstream one will be recorded. This will be a blind test with the data not released prior to submissions. The present paper gives an overview of the initial, open benchmark case, including its objectives, methodology and experimental results.