Title: SIROCCO, SIlant ROtors by aCoustiC Optimisation
1SIROCCO, SIlant ROtors by aCoustiC Optimisation
- Participants
- Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands, ECN
(Gerard Schepers and Toine Curvers) - National Aerospace Laboratory, NLR(Stefan
Oerlemans) - University of Stuttgart, Ustutt(Kurt Braun,
Andreas Herrig, Thorsten Lutz, Werner Wuerz) - Gamesa Aeólica, Gamesa(Beatriz Mendez López,
Alvaro Matesanz) - GE Wind Energy/Global Research, GE (Rainer
Arelt, Thierry Maeder) - Funded by
- EU 5th Framework
- SenterNOVEM (ECN/NLR)
2OUTLINE
- OBJECTIVE
- PROJECT SET-UP (Period, participants, tasks)
- MAIN RESULTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 1 ACOUSTIC ARRAY MEASUREMENTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 2 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF
ACOUSTIC AIRFOIL DESIGN - CONCLUSIONS/FUTURE WORK
3SIROCCO, OBJECTIVE
- To develop tip-airfoils (r/R gt0.75) by which
aerodynamic noise of wind turbines can be reduced
significantly without loss in aerodynamic
performance - Focus is on reduction of trailing edge noise!
- Background Previous EU project DATA
- Noise reduction of 3-6dB(A) on model wind
turbine in the DNW wind tunnel - Trailing edge noise dominant
4SIROCCO, OBJECTIVE Ctd.
- Two baseline turbines
- Gamesa (G58, D58 m, 850 kW, at Zaragoza)
- GE (2.3 MW, D94 m, at ECN test field)
5OUTLINE
- OBJECTIVE
- PROJECT SET-UP (Period, participants, tasks)
- MAIN RESULTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 1 ACOUSTIC ARRAY MEASUREMENTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 2 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF
ACOUSTIC AIRFOIL DESIGN - CONCLUSIONS/FUTURE WORK
6Sirocco Project period
- January 1st 2003 until February 28th 2007
- GE joined project in May 2005
7SIROCCO, 4 phases
- Start-up phase Is acoustic behaviour of baseline
turbines as expected, i.e. is trailing edge noise
dominant? - Acoustic array measurements Location and
quantification of noise sources on wind turbine
blade - 2D design phase Design and test acoustically
optimised airfoils - Development of aero-acoustic design method
- Supported by 2D wind tunnel measurements
-
- 3) 3D design and manufacturing
- 4) Final validation in the field Compare
acoustic and aerodynamic behaviour of optimised
turbine and reference turbine
February 2006
8SIROCCO Participants, main role
- Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands, ECN
- Coordination, design consultancy, aerodynamic
field measurements - National Aerospace Laboratory, NLR
- Acoustic measurements Field and wind tunnel (2D)
- University of Stuttgart
- Development design methodology for acoustically
optimised airfoils - Design of acoustically optimised airfoils
- Validation Wind tunnel (2D) Aerodynamic and
acoustic - Gamesa
- Design of blades with optimised airfoils and
manufacturing - GE Wind Energy
- Design of blades with optimised airfoils and
manufacturing
9OUTLINE
- OBJECTIVE
- PROJECT SET-UP (Period, participants, tasks)
- MAIN RESULTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 1 ACOUSTIC ARRAY MEASUREMENTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 2 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF
ACOUSTIC AIRFOIL DESIGN - CONCLUSIONS /FUTURE WORK
10Is trailing edge noise the dominant noise
source?
- Answer yes as derived from NLRs acoustic array
measurements on GE2.3 turbine/G58 turbine - Assume monopole source at scan point
- Location and quantification of noise sources on
rotating wind turbine blades
GE
Scan points
Microphone array
G58
Delaysum
Sound rays
11Acoustic array measurements Some observations
GE
- Turbine noise dominated by rotor blades
- Noise radiated from outer part of blades (but not
the very tip) - Practically all blade noise (emitted to ground)
produced during downward movement
G58
12Dominance of down-going blades
- The down-going blades are dominant for all
frequencies and all measurements - Indication for trailing edge noise to be dominant
- Can be explained by combination of
- Convective amplification
- Trailing edge noise directivity
sin2(?/2)
13Noise sources on individual G58 blades (clean,
untreated, tripped)
- Typical source plots for individual blades
- Rotating focus plane for each blade
- Averaged over downward part of one rotation
12 dB
0 dB
- Tripped blade significantly noisier than other
two - Indication for TE-noise to be dominant
14TE-noise dominant in calculations, but howgood
are the calculations?
- Spin-off Use measurements to validate wind
turbine noise prediction code SILANT
15SILANT
- Originally developed by Stork Product
Engineering, NLR and TNO ECN - Divide blade in a number of blade elements
- Calculate noise spectrum per element
- Inflow noise Amiet and Lowson
- Trailing edge noise Brooks Pope and Marcolini
- dp and ds at trailing edge from XFOIL and
blade element momentum model - Sum over elements
16SILANT/meas (noise vs. power)
17Measured spectrum vs SILANT spectrum Total
noise, trailing edge noise, inflow noise
18Indications for TE-noise to be dominant
- Practically all blade noise (emitted to the
ground) produced during downward movement
Directivity of trailing edge noise - Tripped blade significantly noisier than other
two Tripping influences trailing
edge noise - Calculated results show TE noise to be dominant
above inflow noise - Blade noise levels scale with 5th power of local
speed Dependancy of trailing edge
noise - Broadband TE noise is the dominant noise
source
19OUTLINE
- OBJECTIVE
- PROJECT SET-UP (Period, participants, tasks)
- MAIN RESULTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 1 ACOUSTIC ARRAY MEASUREMENTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 2 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF
ACOUSTIC AIRFOIL DESIGN - CONCLUSIONS/FUTURE WORK
20Main results Phase 2 2D design phase
- Design philosophy Modify boundary layer at
trailing edge - Improved noise airfoil prediction code coupled to
an aerodynamic airfoil prediction code and
optimizer - Requirements/constraints of manufacturers
implemented - Aerodynamics Acoustics Mean
boundary layer profile turbulent properties at
trailing edge - Using boundary layer wind tunnel measurements on
airfoil with Variable Trailing Edge (VTE)
21ORIGINAL LINK BETWEEN AERODYNAMIC/AERO-ACOUSTIC
MODELLING
- Mean boundary layer profile assumed to be a Coles
profile - Derived from integral boundary-layer parameters
- Turbulence properties
- v2 ,Kt derived from mean boundary layer profile
with mixing length approach - Vertical integral length scale (?2) from mixing
length scale and scaling law - Equilibrium approach!!
- Anisotropy is constant factor
22DESIGN METHOD IMPROVEMENTS MADE DURING SIROCCO
PROJECT
- History and anisotropy effects important for
flow regions with acceleration/deceleration - EDDYBL FD boundary-layer code with stress-?
model (Wilcox) - Vertical integral length scale ?2 is not
provided by available turbulence models - adequate scaling laws required
- Directly found from ?2 measurements in the wind
tunnel
23Aerodynamic/Acoustic validation in windtunnel
- Acoustic validation 1) AWB tunnel (NLR) Array
technique - Open jet
- 1.2x0.8 m2
- 2) LWT tunnel (USTUTT) CPV technique
- Aerodynamic validation
- LWT tunnel of USTUTT
- closed test section
- 0.73x2.73 m2
-
Re1.6 106 Clean/tripped airfoils
CPV Coherent Particle Velocimetry Measurement
of particle velocitieswith hot-wire at pressure
and suction side of airfoil TE, instead
of (microphone) measurement of pressure
fluctuations
LWT
AWB
24GE
Gamesa
Drag polars
Noise polars
25OUTLINE
- OBJECTIVE
- PROJECT SET-UP (Period, participants, tasks)
- MAIN RESULTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 1 ACOUSTIC ARRAY MEASUREMENTS
- RESULTS FROM PHASE 2 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF
ACOUSTIC AIRFOIL DESIGN - CONCLUSIONS/FUTURE WORK
26Conclusions/Future work
- Acoustic array measurements very successfully
applied on full scale turbine Trailing edge
noise is dominant - Design methodology for acoustically optimised
airfoil has been improved and validated
successfully in wind tunnel - New airfoils
- Noise reduction 1-1.5 dB and 2.5-2.9 dB
- Aerodynamic characteristics hardly changed
- Blade design/manufacturing underway
- Full scale validation with hybrid rotor in April
2006/Autumn 2006