Active flow control of vertical-axis wind turbines: Insights from large-eddy simulation and finite-time resolvent analysis
Lucas Feitosa de Souza, Renato Fuzaro Miotto, William Roberto Wolf

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that physics-informed active flow control, based on stability and resolvent analyses, can significantly improve the aerodynamic efficiency of vertical-axis wind turbines by delaying flow separation and vortex formation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel flow control strategy grounded in bi-global stability and finite-time resolvent analyses to enhance VAWT performance.
Findings
Control delays flow separation and vortex formation.
Energy-efficient control consumes only 1% of turbine power.
Significant improvements in aerodynamic performance achieved.
Abstract
Active flow control is applied to improve the aerodynamic performance of a NACA0018 airfoil operating as a single-bladed vertical axis wind turbine (VAWT). Results computed by wall-resolved large-eddy simulations (LES) highlight the detrimental effects of the dynamic stall vortex (DSV) and trailing-edge vortex (TEV) on turbine efficiency, primarily through increased drag and energy loss. The proposed flow control strategy effectively delays flow separation and suppresses large-scale vortex formation, particularly at moderate actuation frequencies. The control parameters are grounded in bi-global stability and finite-time resolvent analyses. These techniques identify the excitation of coupling modes between shear layer and wake instabilities as a mechanism for promoting flow reattachment and preventing vorticity accumulation, ultimately leading to enhanced torque production. The control…
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