Abstract

The use of aero-elastically tailored blades (ATB) for large wind turbines has shown the benefit of mitigating blade loads, in a passive adaptive manner, with the design of bend-twist coupling (BTC) along the blades. The BTC design makes the blades torsionally flexible and capable of adapting to different wind speeds. However, such increased flexibility makes the turbine modeling computationally demanding and the real-time controller design more challenging. In this work, to include the ATB effect into the turbine model for control, a twofold modeling for ATB characteristics is proposed. First a static BTC distribution is added to the turbine aerodynamics to account for the blade’s pre-bend-twist design, next a second-order transfer function is introduced to approximate the blade structural dynamic response to wind speed variations. The nonlinear model of the whole ATB wind turbine is built up in Simulink, linearized and discretized into a state-space form. A model predictive controller (MPC) is developed with the actuator constraints considered. Simulation studies are conducted on a 5MW ATB wind turbine at a selected above-rated wind speed. The use of the simplified model for control is assessed and the performance of MPC is compared to the gain-scheduling baseline controller.

Details

Title
Model predictive control of wind turbine with aero-elastically tailored blades
Author
Hussain, R 1 ; Yue, H 2 ; Recalde-Camacho, L 2 

 Wind Energy and Control Centre, Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University of Strathclyde , 204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW , UK; Electrical Technology Section, Universiti Kuala Lumpur British Malaysian Institute , 53100 Gombak , Malaysia 
 Wind Energy and Control Centre, Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University of Strathclyde , 204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW , UK 
First page
032084
Publication year
2022
Publication date
May 2022
Publisher
IOP Publishing
ISSN
17426588
e-ISSN
17426596
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2672748102
Copyright
Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.