Instability of outer tip vortices for a 2.5 MW wind turbine: integrating snow PIV with LES

ORAL

Abstract

Recent field experiments conducted around a 2.5 MW wind turbine using super-large-scale PIV (SLPIV) using natural snow particles have revealed tip vortex cores (visualized as areas devoid of snowflakes) of complex shape, consisting of both round and elongated void patterns. Here we employ large-eddy simulation to elucidate the structure and dynamics of the complex tip vortices identified experimentally. The LES is shown to reproduce vortex cores in remarkable agreement with the SLPIV results, essentially capturing all vortex core patterns observed in the field in the tip shear layer. We show that the stretched elongated vortex cores observed in 2D planes are the footprints of a second set of counter-rotating spiral vortices that emanates along the tip shear layer immediately downwind of the blades and is intertwined with the tip vortices. We argue that this large-scale instability is of centrifugal type since the mean flow characteristics in the outer tip shear layer resemble those of the Taylor-Couette flow. This study highlights the feasibility of employing snow voids to visualize tip vortices and demonstrates the enormous potential of integrating SLPIV with LES as a powerful tool for gaining novel insights into the wakes of utility scale wind turbines.

*This work was supported by Department of Energy DOE (DE-EE0002980, DE-EE0005482 and DE-AC04-94AL85000), Sandia National Laboratories and NSF Career Award (NSF-CBET-1454259) for Jiarong Hong. Computational resources were provided by SNL and MSI.

Authors

  • Fotis Sotiropoulos

    • St. Anthony Falls Lab., University of Minnesota
    • St. Anthony Falls Lab. University of Minnesota
    • Saint Anthony Falls Laboratory, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering, University of Minnesota
    • Univ of Minn - Minneapolis
    • University of Minnesota
    • St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota
    • Saint Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota
  • Xiaolei Yang

    • Saint Anthony Falls Laboratory, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering, University of Minnesota
    • St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota
    • University of Minnesota
  • Jiarong Hong

    • University of Minnesota
  • Matthew Barone

    • Sandia National Laboratories