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A momentum-conserving wake superposition method for wind-farm flows under pressure gradient

Bowen Du, Mingwei Ge, Xintao Li, Yongqian Liu

2024Journal of Fluid Mechanics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pressure gradient over topography will significantly affect wind-farm flow. However, knowledge gaps still exist on how to superpose wind-turbine wakes in the wind-farm flow analytical model to account for this effect, leading to systematic errors in evaluating wind-farm wake effects. To this end, we derive an implicit momentum-conserving wake superposition method under pressure gradient (PG-IMCM) based on the total momentum deficit equation, which is linearised by the convection velocity introduced by Zong & Porté-Agel ( J. Fluid Mech. , vol. 889, 2020, A8). The PG-IMCM method consists of the linear-weighted sum of individual velocity deficits, the sum of the individual pressure correction terms and the total pressure correction term. Based on a sensitivity analysis, we demonstrate that the last two terms nearly cancel out and, thus, can be neglected, resulting in a simplified form, which has the same form as its counterpart under zero pressure gradient but with the single-wake quantities redefined based on the wake model under pressure gradient. This motivates us to further examine the performance of the combination of five empirical superposition methods and the stand-alone wake model under pressure gradient. Validation results based on large-eddy simulation show that PG-IMCM has an overall satisfactory performance in both the magnitude and shape of the velocity-deficit profiles, provided that the stand-alone turbine wake can be modelled accurately, which is virtually identical with its simplified form. Further comparison with empirical superposition methods shows that local linear and wind product superposition methods based on the updated base flow also have comparable performance, with only discernable differences with the PG-IMCM method in the near-wake region of downstream turbines. Therefore, they are two attractive methods for engineering applications.

Topics & Concepts

WakePressure gradientMomentum (technical analysis)Superposition principleMechanicsMeteorologyEnvironmental sciencePhysicsAtmospheric sciencesBusinessFinanceQuantum mechanicsWind Energy Research and DevelopmentWind and Air Flow StudiesAerodynamics and Fluid Dynamics Research