Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design
2
MesH Engineering GmbH, Stuttgart, Germany
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-02-27
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 0.868
CiteScore: 5.4
Impact factor: 2.4
ISSN: 13845640, 1573272X
Computer Science Applications
Mechanical Engineering
Control and Optimization
Aerospace Engineering
Modeling and Simulation
Abstract
Existing Floating Offshore Wind Turbine (FOWT) platforms are usually designed using static or rigid-body models for the concept stage and, subsequently, sophisticated integrated aero-hydro-servo-elastic models, applicable for design certification. For the new technology of FOWTs, a comprehensive understanding of the system dynamics at the concept phase is crucial to save costs in later design phases. This requires low- and medium-fidelity models. The proposed modeling approach aims at representing no more than the relevant physical effects for the system dynamics. It consists, in its core, of a flexible multibody system. The applied Newton–Euler algorithm is independent of the multibody layout and avoids constraint equations. From the nonlinear model a linearized counterpart is derived. First, to be used for controller design and second, for an efficient calculation of the response to stochastic load spectra in the frequency-domain. From these spectra the fatigue damage is calculated with Dirlik’s method and short-term extremes by assuming a normal distribution of the response. The set of degrees of freedom is reduced, with a response calculated only in the two-dimensional plane, in which the aligned wind and wave forces act. The aerodynamic model is a quasistatic actuator disk model. The hydrodynamic model includes a simplified radiation model, based on potential flow-derived added mass coefficients and nodal viscous drag coefficients with an approximate representation of the second-order slow-drift forces. The verification through a comparison of the nonlinear and the linearized model against a higher-fidelity model and experiments shows that even with the simplifications, the system response magnitude at the system eigenfrequencies and the forced response magnitude to wind and wave forces can be well predicted. One-hour simulations complete in about 25 seconds and even less in the case of the frequency-domain model. Hence, large sensitivity studies and even multidisciplinary optimizations for systems engineering approaches are possible.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Top-30
Journals
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
|
|
|
Energies
7 publications, 20.59%
|
|
|
Journal of Physics: Conference Series
5 publications, 14.71%
|
|
|
Wind Energy Science
4 publications, 11.76%
|
|
|
Journal of Ocean Engineering and Marine Energy
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Renewable Energy
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Wind Energy
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Applied Energy
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Ocean Engineering
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
Results in Engineering
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
International Journal of Parallel, Emergent and Distributed Systems
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
Engineering Structures
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
Journal of the Franklin Institute
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
IEEE Control Systems
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
Journal of Mechanical Design, Transactions Of the ASME
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
|
Publishers
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
|
|
|
Elsevier
9 publications, 26.47%
|
|
|
MDPI
8 publications, 23.53%
|
|
|
IOP Publishing
5 publications, 14.71%
|
|
|
Copernicus
4 publications, 11.76%
|
|
|
Springer Nature
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Wiley
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
2 publications, 5.88%
|
|
|
Taylor & Francis
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
ASME International
1 publication, 2.94%
|
|
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
|
- We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
- Statistics recalculated weekly.
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Metrics
34
Total citations:
34
Citations from 2024:
19
(55.89%)
Cite this
GOST |
RIS |
BibTex |
MLA
Cite this
GOST
Copy
Lemmer (né Sandner) F. et al. Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design // Multibody System Dynamics. 2020. Vol. 49. No. 2. pp. 203-236.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
Copy
Lemmer (né Sandner) F., Yu W., Luhmann B., Schlipf D., Cheng P. L. Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design // Multibody System Dynamics. 2020. Vol. 49. No. 2. pp. 203-236.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1007/s11044-020-09729-x
UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11044-020-09729-x
TI - Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design
T2 - Multibody System Dynamics
AU - Lemmer (né Sandner), Frank
AU - Yu, Wei
AU - Luhmann, Birger
AU - Schlipf, David
AU - Cheng, Po Lun
PY - 2020
DA - 2020/02/27
PB - Springer Nature
SP - 203-236
IS - 2
VL - 49
SN - 1384-5640
SN - 1573-272X
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2020_Lemmer (né Sandner),
author = {Frank Lemmer (né Sandner) and Wei Yu and Birger Luhmann and David Schlipf and Po Lun Cheng},
title = {Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design},
journal = {Multibody System Dynamics},
year = {2020},
volume = {49},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {feb},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s11044-020-09729-x},
number = {2},
pages = {203--236},
doi = {10.1007/s11044-020-09729-x}
}
Cite this
MLA
Copy
Lemmer (né Sandner), Frank, et al. “Multibody modeling for concept-level floating offshore wind turbine design.” Multibody System Dynamics, vol. 49, no. 2, Feb. 2020, pp. 203-236. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11044-020-09729-x.