Coherent dynamics in the rotor tip shear layer of utility scale wind turbines
Xiaolei Yang, Jiarong Hong, Matthew Barone, Fotis Sotiropoulos

TL;DR
This study combines snow-based visualization and large-eddy simulation to analyze the complex coherent vortex dynamics in the tip shear layer of utility-scale wind turbines, revealing centrifugal instability mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of integrating SLPIV with LES to elucidate complex vortex structures and dynamics in wind turbine wakes.
Findings
LES reproduces vortex core patterns observed in SLPIV
Tip vortex interactions generate energetic coherent dynamics
Flow instability is of centrifugal type as per theoretical criteria
Abstract
Recent field experiments conducted in the near-wake (up to 0.5 rotor diameters downwind of the rotor) of a 2.5 MW wind turbine using snow-based super-large-scale particle image velocimetery (SLPIV) (Hong et al., Nature Comm., vol. 5, 2014, no. 4216) were successful in visualizing tip vortex cores as areas devoid of snowflakes. The so-visualized snow voids, however, suggested tip vortex cores of complex shape consisting of circular cores with distinct elongated comet-like tails. We employ large-eddy simulation (LES) to elucidate the structure and dynamics of the complex tip vortices identified experimentally. The LES is shown to reproduce vortex cores in good qualitative agreement with the SLPIV results, essentially capturing all vortex core patterns observed in the field in the tip shear layer. We show that the visualized vortex patterns are the result of energetic coherent dynamics in…
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