The impacts of atmospheric icing on performance and behavior of a controlled large-scale wind turbine

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2023-11-01
Şahin, Mustafa
Farsadi, Touraj
Icing degrades turbine performance by altering the geometry of blade airfoils, reducing turbine power output, and increasing structural loads. In this study, the impacts of atmospheric icing on the full performance and behavior of a controlled large-scale wind turbine are thoroughly investigated. Using the Mustafa Sahin bladed wind turbine simulation model, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory 5 MW turbine is simulated with and without iced blades. The turbine blades are considered fully covered by light icing at the leading edge, which causes a reduction of up to 9.27% in Cl and an increase of up to 48% in Cd data of blade airfoils. Turbine static performance and behavior are examined at different uniform winds between cut-in and cut-out wind speeds, while the dynamic performance and behavior are estimated under turbulent winds at below (region II) and above (region III) rated regions. Simulation results are presented in terms of various turbine parameters, such as rotor power, thrust, their coefficients, blade pitch angle, rotor speed, etc. Results show that such light icing alters the turbine's aerodynamic characteristics and dynamics, increasing the turbine's cut-in and rated wind speeds, and reducing the thrust and maximum power coefficients by 5.5% and 13.35%, respectively. Under the same uniform winds, due to icing, turbine static performance and behavior are drastically disrupted in below rated region, resulting in reduced rotor speed, turbine efficiency, thrust, and power output by up to 4.77%, 39.7%, 7.63%, and 40%, respectively. In region III, however, thrust increases by up to 15% although the power output, rotor speed, and turbine efficiency do not change considerably. When the dynamic responses are examined under turbulent wind with a mean of 7.9 m/s in region II, mean power and fluctuations reduce by 14.17% and 10.88%, respectively. The mean thrust decreases by 6.86%, while its fluctuations reduce by 11.33%. The mean rotor speed reduces by 3.83%, and its fluctuations decrease by 12.84%. Under turbulent wind with a mean of 15.7 m/s in region III, the mean power and fluctuations decrease by 0.053% and 1.95%, respectively. The mean thrust increases by 11.99% and its fluctuations drop by 0.84%. The mean rotor speed does not change much, but its fluctuations increase by 0.132%. The mean blade pitch angle reduces by 9.39%, while its fluctuations increase by 7.39%.
Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy
Citation Formats
M. Şahin and T. Farsadi, “The impacts of atmospheric icing on performance and behavior of a controlled large-scale wind turbine,” Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, vol. 15, no. 6, pp. 0–0, 2023, Accessed: 00, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/107630.