The Stability of Wakes of Floating Wind Turbines
Vitor G. Kleine, Lucas Franceschini, Bruno S. Carmo, Ardeshir Hanifi,, Dan S. Henningson

TL;DR
This study investigates the wake stability of floating offshore wind turbines using numerical simulations and linear stability theory, revealing how platform motion influences vortex instabilities and flow structures affecting turbine performance.
Contribution
The paper develops simplified vortex stability models for all degrees of freedom of turbine motion and validates them with high-fidelity simulations, linking platform motion to wake dynamics.
Findings
Vortex instability modes are excited by turbine motion and predicted by linear stability theory.
The highest growth rate occurs at motion frequency 1.5 times the turbine rotation frequency.
Large flow structures form at lower frequencies, increasing oscillations and potential fatigue.
Abstract
Floating offshore wind turbines (FOWTs) are subjected to platform motion induced by wind and wave loads. The oscillatory movement trigger vortex instabilities, modifying the wake structure, influencing the flow reaching downstream wind turbines. In this work, the wake of a FOWT is analysed by means of numerical simulations and comparison with linear stability theory. Two simplified models based on the stability of vortices are developed for all degrees of freedom of turbine motion. In our numerical simulations, the wind turbine blades are modeled as actuator lines and a spectral-element method with low dispersion and dissipation is employed to study the evolution of the perturbations. The turbine motion excites vortex instability modes predicted by the linear stability of helical vortices. The flow structures that are formed in the non-linear regime are a consequence of the growth of…
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