1. Introduction
The general trend for wind power shows an increase in installed capacity and a larger share offshore [
1]. More and larger wind farms are planned offshore in Europe [
2] and an increase in the number of wind farms that are built in close proximity in wind farm clusters can be seen [
3].
This makes it interesting to study not only the wake interaction inside wind farms but also the long distance wakes behind wind farms and how the wake from one wind farm interacts with other wind farms, in a so-called farm farm interaction.
Studies of long distance wakes can be performed with different simulation methods ranging from self similar models, linearized models, Reynolds average Navier Stokes (RANS), Meso scale models (for example using the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF)) to Large Eddy Simulations (LES) [
4,
5,
6,
7]. WRF normally uses a lower grid resolution than LES, which makes it less computationally demanding but has therefore also the disadvantage that the wind farm needs to be more coarsely parameterized. WRF includes on the other hand more physics about the atmosphere. LES have the advantage that the higher resolution can resolve more scales in the flow and can more accurately model wake interaction especially inside the wind farms [
8]. LES have led to good results for studying wakes inside wind farms, see, among others, [
9,
10,
11,
12]. LES have been used in fewer studies when it comes to long distance wakes and farm to farm interaction and are still challenging regarding the needed computational resources. Earlier studies of long distance wakes have been performed for Horns Rev I [
13] and Lillgrund [
14]. In these studies the impact of the Coriolis force was not included and a wind shear with only a velocity in the streamwise direction was used. In a later study of the long distance wake behind Horns Rev I, the wind veer was included [
8]. The wind veer was included as a mean value taken from a WRF simulation. When compared with the earlier study the results were closer to site data for the wake behind Horns Rev I.
The Coriolis force is in several LES studies using a forced boundary layer (FBL) technique not included in simulations [
9,
10]. With the larger distances involved in the study of long distance wakes the turn of the wind due to the Coriolis force becomes of higher importance. As the Coriolis force is proportional to the wind speed, it creates a directional change of the mean wind shear with height. Variations of this force in time and space also occur due to changes in wind speed associated to wind turbine’s wakes and atmospheric turbulence. It is natural to question whether the turn of the wake is more greatly impacted by the mean wind veer or change in Coriolis force due to variations in velocity. This question was studied by Van der Laan [
15] using RANS with the conclusion that the main impact was from the wind veer due to the downward momentum transport in the wake. For the studied latitude (43.3 deg) in the northern hemisphere it led to a turn to the right of the wake region. Van der Laan also looked at earlier studies of the Coriolis force in the northern hemisphere. The studies had different conclusions as to if the major impact is due to the reduction of the wind speed in the wake that turns the wake to the left or from the increased downward momentum transport due to the wind farm turning the wake to the right due to the wind veer. Some studies focused on the impact of wind veer and concluded that the farm wake turns to the right due to the wind veer. Other studies focused on the impact of the Coriolis force in the wake due to the reduced wind speed. One of the studies was performed with LES using a precursor simulation [
16], this study indicated that a turn to the left dominated. These results gave a different conclusion than was found by Van der Laan [
15]. Other studies found that the inclusion of the Coriolis force had some impact on the production for a full wake direction due to the turn of the wake [
17].
The aim of the current study is to include the Coriolis force in simulations using a FBL technique. This is performed by including the mean wind veer in the FBL and combining it with a Coriolis correction for the deviations from the mean flow. The FBL technique used in this article gives you more control over the setup of the boundary layer, compared to a precursor simulation, since any mean wind profile can be added in the domain using body forces. This makes it possible to mimic for exempel a measured wind shear or a wind shear obtained from simulations using a Meso scale model. The wind shear can also include the mean wind veer due to the Coriolis force. A mean wind profile will however not take local deviations, e.g. from wakes and atmospheric turbulence, from the mean profile into account and therefore neglects a part of the Coriolis force. A correction for this neglection is proposed in this article which is also added as a source term, defined as the Coriolis correction.
The study will also examine the impact of the wind veer and the change in Coriolis force in the wake region on the development of the wake. The setup regarding wind veer and latitude is similar to Van der Laan [
15] to be able to compare his results using RANS by these using LES. Using the FBL technique and the Coriolis correction also allows for the study of the impact of wind veer and local impact of the Coriolis force in the wake region independently. The results can be used to conclude if the Coriolis force needs to be considered for studies of long distance wakes and what needs to be included, i.e., the mean wind veer, the Coriolis correction or both. This is of importance to asses the results from studies using the FBL-technique without including the effects of the Coriolis force (for example [
13,
14]) or only including the wind veer (for example [
8]). Further this study will investigate how the Coriolis force could impact the power output in a wind farm cluster.
2. Numerical Model
LES in the EllipSys3D code are used. LES resolve the largest and most energetic eddies and only the smallest eddies are modelled, here using the subgrid-scale model from Ta-Phouc [
18]. The turbines are introduced into the simulations using an actuator disc method (ACD) based on airfoil data [
19]. A generator-torque controller is used to adjust each turbine’s rotational speed in the variable flow in a realistic way [
20]. Both the ACD and the atmosphere i.e., turbulence and wind shear are introduced using body forces in the incompressible Navier Stokes (NS) equations formulated in vector notation, see Equation (
1). In this equation
is the velocity,
the pressure,
t the time,
the density of air and
is the kinematic viscosity, and
is the subgrid scale viscosity. The bar represent the filtered parameters. The coordinate system used in the article is
with the velocities
for the streamwise, spanwise and vertical directions. The body forces
that are added in the domain comes from the ACD (
), from the FBL (
) and from the turbulence
) as described in [
10]. The Coriolis correction defined in Equations (
3) and (
4) can be added as
. The code is non-dimensional (normalized with respect to the rotor radius
and the undisturbed velocity at hub height (
).
The production (P) is calculated, according to Equation (
2), as the angular velocity of the rotor
, which adjust to the flow using the generator-torque controller, times the rotor torque. The rotor torque is calculated as the area integral over the rotor area (
A) of the local forces in the tangential direction per unit area calculated in the ACD model (
) times the local radius (
r). In the results the relative production (
) is presented which is
P normalized with the production for the first turbine in the row of turbines (
).
2.1. The FBL Technique
The incoming neutral atmospheric boundary layer, which can also include a wind veer, is mimicked by using a FBL technique that uses body forces [
11] to introduce the wind shear in the NS-equations, Equation (
1). The body forces are calculated iteratively inspired by the immersed boundary technique in a prestep to reach the desired wind profile in the domain. In the main simulations these forces are applied in the whole domain to maintain the incoming wind shear in the whole domain. Varying body forces are similarly used to add a realistic atmospheric turbulence from the Mann model [
21,
22] as planes inside the equidistant region. The used method to impose the wind shear and the turbulence inside the domain has a number of advantages compared to the use of an initial flow condition and variations at the inlet boundaries [
11]. Among others the applied wind shear is a solution to the NS-equations and the turbulence plane allows for a stretched region in the inlet of the domain which saves grid points for the equidistant region of interest (where the analysis are performed).
2.2. The Coriolis Correction
The Coriolis force due to the rotation of the Earth is proportional to the velocity and since the velocity differs with height this leads to a turning of the wind with height, a so-called wind veer. In the FBL the mean profile of the wind shear including wind veer is added using body forces. Deviation from the mean due to wakes and turbulence is not handled by the FBL and an extra Coriolis correction body force
needs to be added in Equation (
1) to include this. Equations (
3) and (
4) show the added forces (before non-dimensionalization) associated to the Coriolis correction in the
x respectively
z directions. Here
is the rotation of the Earth,
is the latitude,
u,
w are the instantaneous local velocities and
U,
W are the mean values used in the FBL. The latitude
degrees is used in the studied case which corresponds to the Coriolis parameter
, also used by Van der Laan [
15]). The non dimensionalized (with respect to
R and
) form,
, of Equations (
3) and (
4) are added in Equation (
1).
3. Simulations
Simulations are performed for a row of turbines as well as for two idealized wind farms. The overall setup is similar to a study performed previously on the wake behind the Horns Rev wind farm [
8], where
= 8 m/s, with the same wind turbines (a downscaled version of the NREL 5 MW turbine corresponding to a Vestas V80 with rated power of 2 MW), with a hub height of 70 m and a
R of 40 m. The simulations have a resolution (
x) of 0.1
R (4 m) which has shown to be sufficient in earlier studies [
10,
23]. A non dimensionalized (with
and
R) time step (
t) of 0.05 is used. In earlier studies using the FBL technique [
8,
10,
11,
23] a time step ranging between 0.025 and 0.05 have been used with stable results. All these time steps fulfil the CFL condition (which for
x = 0.1 and u = 1 is fulfilled for
t < 0.1). The turbulence box has a lower resolution 1.67
x and a larger time step of 0.12, therefore a spatial and temporal interpolation is employed. The total boundary layer height is 25
R (1000 m) and the grid has an equidistant area of 8
R in the vertical direction. The simulations ran first for 12,000
t to allow for the turbulence to advect through and fill the domain. All the turbines also need to adjust to the flow. The simulations thereafter continued to ran and the studied parameters are averaged for 12,000
t corresponding to 50 min in physical time. The boundary layers used are described below, followed by a further description of the used wind farm configurations and cases.
3.1. Boundary Layer
When using the FBL technique a mean wind shear and synthetic turbulence are added using body forces. Those are described below. Please recall that in the simulations neutral atmospheric conditions are assumed.
3.1.1. Wind Shear
The wind shear used in the simulations is a logarithmic profile for the horizontal velocity (
) vs the height (
y), see Equation (
5). There (
) is the von Karman constant and the roughness length is
. The friction velocity
is calculated to provide a wind velocity of 8 m/s at hub height.
In the simulations two wind shear profiles are used, one with all flow in the streamwise direction and one with a turning of the wind with height.
Figure 1a–c provide information for the cases.
Figure 1a shows the total horizontal velocity together with the corresponding streamwise component
W when a linear wind veer of 2 degrees over the rotor is considered, as shown in
Figure 1b.
Figure 1c shows the spanwise velocity
U corresponding to this case. For the former case where no wind veer is considered,
U is the same as
in
Figure 1.
3.1.2. Turbulence
The turbulence box has a length corresponding to 10 min in physical time used repeatedly. The side and vertical extensions are described below for each of the studied wind farm configurations.
The level of turbulence is based on the used
, the same value used for the shear. This results, when adding the turbulence at 13
R, in a downstream development of the turbulence level (
) (here defined as the standard deviation of the horizontal velocity divided by
) at hub height according to
Figure 2. This simulation is performed in the grid for the row without any turbines. To avoid positioning the turbines in the first region where the turbulence level develops the most, as also seen in other studies [
24], the first turbine is added at z = 100
R where the turbulence level is around 6% according to
Figure 2.
3.2. Wind Farm Configurations and Cases
Simulations are performed to study the flow behind a wind farm for a number of cases. This is to study how the wind farm wakes interact with other wind farms as well as how sensitive the simulations are to different wind shears and the turning of the wake due to the Coriolis force.
Table 1 shows how the mean wind veer and the Coriolis correction are included in the studied cases. Simulations are performed in a first step for the flow behind a row of turbines and then for an idealized farm to farm interaction situation.
3.2.1. Row of Turbines
The row of turbines consists of four turbines with an internal spacing of 14
R, see
Figure 3. The first turbine is at
z = 100
R in the streamwise direction and at
x = 50
R in the spanwise direction. The total domain has the extensions 100
R × 392
R × 25
R in the x, z respectively y directions. The inner equidistant region covers the
x-coordinates 50 ± 17
R, the
z-coordinates 10–392
R and has a height of 8
R. The extension of the equidistant region covers in the
z-direction a distance up to 250
R (8 km) behind the last turbine of the row.
The turbulence is added at z = 13
R and has side extensions which cover with some margin the equidistant region, i.e., 38.4
R (covering 33–67
R in
Figure 3). Vertically between 0.4
R and 10
R in height is added.
3.2.2. Idealized Farm to Farm Interaction Case
Two idealized wind farms of 4 × 4 wind turbines with an internal spacing of 14
R are considered, see
Figure 4. The first wind farm’s front row turbines are placed at
z = 100
R in the streamwise direction and are centered around
x = 150
R in the spanwise direction. The total domain has the extensions 300
R × 392
R × 25
R in the x, z respectively y directions. The inner equidistant region covers the
x-coordinates 150 ± 72.5
R, the
z-coordinates 10–392
R and has a height of 8
R. The extension of the equidistant region covers in the
z-direction the second wind farm that starts at 292
R, which corresponds to 150
R (6 km) behind the first wind farm.
The turbulence is added at z = 13
R and has side extensions which cover with some margin the equidistant region, i.e., 153.6
R (covering 77.5–222.5
R in
Figure 4). Vertically between 0.4
R and 10
R in height is added.
5. Conclusions
LES using a FBL technique approach were performed for neutral atmospheric conditions with the Coriolis force included. The mean wind shear including the mean wind veer due to the Coriolis force can be included in the FBL. The variation of the Coriolis force due to the reduced velocity in the wake, the so-called Coriolis correction, was added with an extra force term. The study also examined the impact of the wind veer and the change in Coriolis force in the wake region on the development of the wake.
Including the wind veer in the simulation for a row of 4 turbines turns the wake behind it to the right and including the Coriolis correction turns it to the left. The implemented method shows the expected results considering the used wind veer and the equations for the Coriolis correction. When including both the veer and the Coriolis correction the resulting turn is to the right, indicating the dominant impact of the wind veer for the studied conditions. These results using LES are in line with the earlier findings from the study of Van der Laan [
15] using RANS.
To study the impact of the Coriolis force on the total energy production in a wind farm cluster an idealized farm to farm interaction case was used. For a full wake direction in the idealized farm to farm interaction case it can be seen that when wind veer and the Coriolis correction are included relative production for a full wake direction increases by around 3%. This is only slightly less than when just wind veer is included. It can be noted that a lack of a yaw controller in the simulations could suppress the increase of relative production. This is because the change of wind direction due to the Coriolis force could provide a smaller yaw misalignment than when no yaw controller is used.
To conclude, the FBL technique has been used including a wind veer and also a Coriolis correction. The results show that the Coriolis force impact on the mean wind shear (the wind veer) is greater when compared to its local impact due to the reduction of wind speed in the wake (here included as a so-called Coriolis correction). To include all aspects of the Coriolis force the implemented Coriolis correction can be used. The results indicate however that FBL technique can be used for studies of long distance wakes without including a Coriolis correction but efforts needs to be taken to use a wind shear with a correct mean wind veer. This is of importance to asses the results from earlier studies using the FBL-technique without including the effects of the Coriolis force or only including the wind veer.
In this study neutral atmospheric conditions were considered. The atmospheric conditions are expected to impact both the wind shear including the wind veer and the turbulence level which impact the recovery of the velocity in the wake. It could therefore be of interest for future work to investigate the relative impact of the different contributions of the Coriolis force in unstable and stable atmospheric conditions as well.