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Experimental study on the wake meandering within a scale model wind farm subject to a wind-tunnel flow simulating an atmospheric boundary layer
Coudou, N.; Buckingham, S.; Bricteux, L.; van Beeck, J. (2018). Experimental study on the wake meandering within a scale model wind farm subject to a wind-tunnel flow simulating an atmospheric boundary layer. Boundary-Layer Meteorol. 167(1): 77-98. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10546-017-0320-8
In: Boundary-layer meteorology. Reidel: Dordrecht. ISSN 0006-8314; e-ISSN 1573-1472, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    Wind-tunnel-scale atmospheric boundary layer; Hot-wire anemometry;Particle image velocimetry; Wake meandering; Wind-turbine wakes

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Abstract
    The phenomenon of meandering of the wind-turbine wake comprises the motion of the wake as a whole in both horizontal and vertical directions as it is advected downstream. The oscillatory motion of the wake is a crucial factor in wind farms, because it increases the fatigue loads, and, in particular, the yaw loads on downstream turbines. To address this phenomenon, experimental investigations are carried out in a wind-tunnel flow simulating an atmospheric boundary layer with the Coriolis effect neglected. A scaled wind farm composed of three-bladed rotating wind-turbine models is subject to a neutral boundary layer over a slightly-rough surface, i.e. corresponding to offshore conditions. Particle-image-velocimetry measurements are performed in a horizontal plane at hub height in the wakes of the three wind turbines occupying the wind-farm centreline. These measurements allow determination of the wake centrelines, with spectral analysis indicating the characteristic wavelength of the wake-meandering phenomenon. In addition, measurements with hot-wire anemometry are performed along a vertical line in the wakes of the same wind turbines, with both techniques revealing the presence of wake meandering behind all three turbines. The spectral analysis performed with the spatial and temporal signals obtained from these two measurement techniques indicates a Strouhal number of based on the characteristic wake-meandering frequency, the rotor diameter and the flow speed at hub height.

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