Title: Power Management
1Power Management of Wind Turbines
presented by Barry Rawn MASc Candidate Universit
y of Toronto
Wind Power Generation Symposium- February 20th,
2004 SF1105 1-5pm
2Power Management of Wind Turbines
motivation modelling control potential
3motivation
4motivation
Improving the flexibility and power quality
provided by wind generation can enable the spread
of wind power.
5motivation
what are the main differences between
conventional generators and wind turbines?
6motivation
I.
The power available in the wind varies on several
time-scales. This could impact -power
planning -power quality
7motivation
II.
Wind turbines are systems having nonlinear
dynamics and oscillatory modes. This can affect
considerations of grid stability where controlled
wind turbines are present.
8motivation
Modern turbines run at variable speeds and
interface to the grid through power electronic
converters. An exploration can be made of
the extent to which a controlled turbine can act
as a more stable-looking generator.
9modelling
10modelling
-blades
The blades of a turbine transfer momentum from
the wind like the wings of an aircraft. The
character of the flow depends on an effective
angle of attack
11modelling
-blades
Aerodynamic stall has two important
effects -dictates an optimal power
extraction -defines a division between two
dynamical regimes
12modelling
-spinning blades
- irregular wind field forces system both
periodically and randomly - disturbance at the blade passing frequency may
- occur due to
- tower shadow
- wind shear
- rotational sampling
13modelling
-spinning blades
blade passing frequency present in spectrum of
blade forces, but not in spectrum of
wind averaging force signals associated with
rotor angle reveals periodic components less
significant for variable speed systems
14modelling
-mechanical modes
flexible structure has many mechanical modes of
oscillation these must be considered in
structural designs
15modelling
-mechanical modes
for control and power system studies, capturing
the two main inertias and their flexible coupling
is sufficient
16modelling
17control
18- several degrees of freedom available to control
energy flow within the system -
- power in must balance power out
control
19- different strategies exist
control
20Tony Turbine
Greg Grid
control
21Tony Turbine
uses control freedom to - optimize power
extraction - minimize torsional oscillations
control
22Greg Grid
Left with responsibility to balance power Can
partially influence how power is delivered to the
grid
control
23Tony Turbine feeds Greg Grid a power that's best
for the wind turbine, and Greg accommodates.
control
24- control tasks are decoupled in some sense
- influence on grid is a shared responsibility
between both Tony Turbine and Greg Grid
control
25let's consider a different division of tasks one
based on energy management
control
26Fast Freida
Cool Clara
control
27Fast Freida
maintains power balance and minimizes torsional
oscillations using energy from the turbine
control
28Cool Clara
sets a smooth power extraction, and reacts to
grid changes appropriately using full freedom
control
29Cool Clara requests a power that is least harmful
to the grid. Fast Freida conveys it and attempts
to contain wind disturbances.
control
30The success of such a control scheme places trust
in two main assumptions.
control
31Fast Freida has to trust that Cool Clara will
always demand a power that is achievable.
control
32Cool Clara has to trust that Fast Freida will
manage the capacitor voltage within tolerances,
and limit mechanical resonance
control
33appropriate control design makes both assumptions
valid
control
34control
35control
36control
37potential
38Assuming such control could be practically
realized, this methodology
- further reduces potentially troublesome influence
of wind variation - frees the converter interface to make the system
appear more robust over short time scales - allows the possibility of shifting between
optimal and conservative power extraction, based
on grid conditions
potential
39Future investigation would further characterize
the properties of such a controlled system.
Examples include
- controls based on inference of hub energy could
eliminate need for accurate wind speed
measurement and reduce stall recovery incidents - some potential may exist for a kind of
dispatchability of energy on short time scales
between turbines in a wind farm
potential
40Power Management of Wind Turbines
presented by Barry Rawn MASc Candidate Universit
y of Toronto
thanks!