SUPERGEN WIND ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES-CORE, Towards the Offshore Wind Power Station

Find Similar History 63 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add Favourite

Title
SUPERGEN WIND ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES-CORE, Towards the Offshore Wind Power Station

CoPED ID
aafec410-fba0-4be7-9b4e-11462154a300

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
£9,668,380

Start Date
March 23, 2010

End Date
Sept. 29, 2014

Description

More Like This


The Mission of Supergen Wind 2'To undertake research to achieve an integrated, cost-effective, reliable & available Offshore Wind Power Station.'This will be done under the four objectives:Reliability.Resource estimation.Scaling up of turbine sizes.Lifetime costs.The project will have two parallel Initiating Themes during the first two years. The first to deal with research into the physics and engineering of the offshore wind farm. The second to look more specifically at the wind turbine, building upon the lessons of Supergen Wind 1. In the third and fourth years of the project, the results of these two Themes will feed into a third Gathering Theme, which will consider the wind farm as a power station looking at how the power station should be designed, operated and maintained for optimum reliability and what the overall economics will be.


More Information

Potential Impact:
Offshore wind energy forms a major part of the UK Government's strategy for reducing CO2 emissions and combating climate change. However, the technology is still rapidly evolving and, while onshore turbine availability is high, the cost of individual foundations offshore is driving designers towards ever-larger machines for this market with consequently uncertain reliability levels. The underpinning research proposed by the Supergen Wind 2 Consortium will help to achieve safer, more reliable installations to the benefit of the wind energy industry, the electric power utilities and grid operators, the electricity consumer, Government policy makers, and the environment. Beyond this collective impact, the individual work packages can be said to target more well-defined clusters of beneficiaries as follows: The work on improved estimates of offshore wind resource will benefit the wind energy industry in terms of enabling better siting, but also other ocean users in terms of the understanding of wind conditions. The programme on wakes and aerodynamics is specifically aimed at wind farm developers so that they can optimise the placement of turbines within an offshore wind array and better understand the impact of one wind farm on another nearby. Success in this area would mean more economic wind farm installations with knock-on effects in terms of energy cost and operational reliability. Research on the impact of wind turbines on radar systems is targeted at other ocean users who need to navigate round or through the wind farm. The reduction/removal of false echoes and blindness areas will improve effectiveness of harbour/coastguard authorities, air/sea rescue, and general marine navigation. The development of improved wind turbine controllers will facilitate turbine designers in the trend towards larger machine sizes (which optimise the use of expensive offshore foundations). The work is also aimed at enabling operators to optimise the output of the wind turbine depending on set point output, position in array, or when operating under part-load due to a fault condition. The improved flexibility of operation will benefit the commercial operator, the network operator, and the end-consumer of electricity. Structural analysis tools for rotor-wind field interaction will enable the better understanding of loads and load transfer within the blades, drive train, gearbox (if present), bearings, nacelle and tower. There are impacts in terms of the specification and use of materials, more accurate load definition (essential benefit for component suppliers), and turbine operation - with consequent benefits to manufacturers and operators. Work on turbine blade and tower materials and materials processing techniques is particularly relevant to blade and wind turbine manufacturers, of which several are represented within the project. Through Strathclyde, the Consortium is deeply involved in the Energy Technology Institute (ETI) programme on offshore wind energy. While the ETI projects are aimed at Technology Readiness Level (TRL) 3-6, the Supergen Wind 2 programme is specifically aimed at TRL 1-3, thereby providing much of the underpinning basic research required by the ETI projects. An integrated, web-enabled Condition Monitoring package will be developed in Theme 3 that will be capable of collecting data from offshore wind farm SCADA systems, assessing it using fault detection algorithms developed by Durham and other partners, and returning information to commercial partners/subscribers so that maintenance requirements can be addressed in a timely manner. This tool has high potential to improve the operating economics of offshore wind turbines with benefits to commercial operators and all users of the electricity network. The requirement for fewer, well-scheduled maintenance visits will also help reduce the incidence of injuries/fatalities from statistical considerations but also because visits can be scheduled during calmer weather.

Peter John Tavner PI_PER
Simon Hogg PI_PER
Philip Hancock COI_PER
Sandy Smith COI_PER
Peter McGregor COI_PER
I Cotton COI_PER
Simon Watson COI_PER
Alan Ruddell COI_PER
Mike Barnes COI_PER
Constantinos Soutis COI_PER
Philip Charles Eames COI_PER
Andrew Geoffrey Dutton COI_PER
Olimpo Anaya-Lara COI_PER
Alan Robins COI_PER
Bill Leithead COI_PER
Anthony Brown COI_PER
Andrew Cruden COI_PER
Clive Mingham COI_PER
Li Ran COI_PER
Roger Dixon COI_PER
Paul Hogg COI_PER
Derek Causon COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Wind energy
  2. Wind power stations
  3. Wind farms
  4. Wind
  5. Optimisation
  6. Renewable energy sources
  7. Turbines
  8. Wind turbines

Extracted key phrases
  1. SUPERGEN WIND ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES
  2. Available Offshore Wind Power Station
  3. Offshore wind turbine
  4. Offshore wind farm SCADA system
  5. Wind turbine manufacturer
  6. Offshore wind energy
  7. Wind turbine controller
  8. Economic wind farm installation
  9. Offshore wind resource
  10. Supergen Wind 2'To
  11. Wind farm developer
  12. Wind energy industry
  13. Wind field interaction
  14. Wind condition
  15. Turbine designer

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations