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Manchester Metropolitan University investigates floating turbine stabilisation

4C Offshore | Tom Russell
By: Tom Russell 07/08/2019 Manchester Metropolitan University
Manchester Metropolitan University has secured a £124,000 grant to develop computer models to test the best methods to stabilise and control the motions of the turbine and its semi-submerged support structure. The wave simulation specialists aim to improve the financial feasibility of floating wind by researching the solutions to stabilise the floating pontoons they would have to sit on.

Dr Ling Qian, Reader in Computational Fluid Dynamics at the Centre for Mathematical Modelling and Flow Analysis at Manchester Metropolitan University, and the lead academic on the project, said: “The UK is a world leader in developing offshore renewable energy technologies and offshore wind turbines hold huge potential for future energy sustainability.

“At the moment most offshore wind turbines are fixed-bottom devices that are secured directly to the seabed and normally it is located not very far from the coastline.

“But if you’re close to the shoreline you get lots of people objecting to the construction of a wind farm.

“If you want to locate wind turbines far away from the shore at a water depth of more than 50m, a fixed-bottom turbine becomes a very expensive and challenging engineering project.

“So we need to develop a floating offshore wind turbine that works in water deeper than 50m, but that leaves the top-heavy turbines exposed to being buffeted by high winds and rough seas even if the buoyant support system is attached to mooring lines anchored to the sea floor.”


Based on a code they have developed themselves, Dr Qian and colleagues will use the University’s high performance computer cluster to run a computer simulation of waves interacting with a platform based on an existing design for floating support structures. Dr Qian said representative waves from the North Sea will be used in the computer simulation.

The design comprises three connected columns 50m apart, creating a triangle frame in which the turbine sits, keeping the majority of the mast above the surface of the water.  It is manufactured separately from the turbines – which are typically 130m high with a blade length of between 60m and 90m – and the two are bolted together on location.
 
The Manchester Metropolitan University team’s model will incorporate two proposed stabilisation measures, first testing with one and then adding the second. The first being a tuned liquid damper which is a U-shaped tube filled with water, which sloshes as the platform moves and acts as a counterbalance and helps absorb the rotational movements. The second measure includes heave plates, placed under the three columns like the suspension in a car to suppress the up and down motion.

Dr Qian said: “Under extreme wave conditions such as during storms, floating platforms will undergo large movements and sometimes this movement is dangerous and leads to system damages.

“Therefore, we need to make sure the device can survive such storms with large waves.

“On the other hand, in order for the wind turbine to operate optimally we also need to control its motion.

“There is already one commercial floating offshore wind demonstration project in the UK, a test farm off the coast of Scotland near Peterhead, but to enhance the technical viability and to drive the cost down, further fundamental research is still needed.

“In this project, we will look at some novel and cost-effective techniques to stabilise a floating system so it can operate under high sea states and survive the worst impact.”


Once Dr Qian and his team have carried out their computer modelling, a 1:30 scale model of the turbine will be tested in a wave tank with research partners at Ningbo University in Ningbo, China.  

The 12-month project, ‘Passive Control of Wave Induced Platform Motions for Semi-submersible FOWTs’, has been awarded £124,000 from the Flexible Fund of the Supergen Offshore Renewable Energy Hub, which provides research leadership to connect stakeholders, inspire innovation and maximise societal value in offshore renewable energy and is funded with £9 million from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.

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