The impact of coherent large-scale vortices generated by helix active wake control on the recovery process of wind turbine wakes
Jonas Gutknecht (TU Delft - Team Jan-Willem van Wingerden)
Emanuel Taschner (TU Delft - Team Jan-Willem van Wingerden)
M. Coquelet (TU Delft - Team Jan-Willem van Wingerden)
A Viré (TU Delft - Flow Physics and Technology)
Jan Willem van Wingerden (TU Delft - Team Jan-Willem van Wingerden)
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Abstract
Within a wind farm, each wind turbine extracts kinetic energy from the flow to convert it into electric energy. Unavoidably, this reduces the downstream availability of kinetic energy, diminishing the power generation of turbines operating in the waked region. These wake-induced power losses cumulate throughout the wind farm, posing a risk to its economic feasibility. One method that mitigates these power losses is helix active wake control. By leveraging individual blade pitch control, it induces an uneven thrust distribution over the rotor plane, which rotates either in clockwise (CW) or counterclockwise (CCW) direction around the rotor center. The wake deforms into a helical shape that recovers faster than the wake of a conventionally controlled turbine and thereby increases the total generated power. Notably, the CCW helix consistently outperforms the CW helix across all available studies. This work investigates the physical principles underlying these wake recovery enhancements using large eddy simulations (LES) of a wind turbine exposed to laminar, uniform flow. We observe a spatially coherent helical vortex structure in the wake boundary, which actively transports mean kinetic energy into the wake and, therefore, poses a fundamental contributor to the wake recovery enhancement. The opposing rotational directions of CW and CCW helixes result in distinct interactions of the helical vortex with the hub vortex, leading to different wake recovery mechanisms. In the investigated laminar inflow, the CCW helix has transported 44.8% more mean kinetic energy into the wake than the CW helix up to a streamwise position of 5D, explaining their differing efficacies observed in previous studies.