The present invention relates to pitch actuation in a situation where one blade load sensor is unavailable.
Wind turbines, as known in the art, comprise a tower supporting a nacelle and a rotor with a number of pitch-adjustable rotor blades.
For large wind turbines, there is generally a benefit in controlling the pitch for the purpose of load reduction, e.g. to alleviate asymmetric loads on the rotor and excessive loads experienced by a blade, either in the flap direction or in the edgewise direction. In particular, excitations experienced by a blade in the edgewise direction are generally undesirable as the blades are typically weakly damped in that direction.
It is generally known to base individual pitch control on blade load sensor signals, such as blade load sensors placed in the root section of a blade. Individual pitch control normally relies on all three blade sensor measurements being available. If one sensor goes offline and becomes unavailable, the wind turbine may be derated in a safe mode to ensure operation well within the design load envelope. This causes the turbine to operate in a less efficient manner, which negatively impacts on the energy capture.
It would be advantageous to achieve an improved manner of blade pitch control based on blade load sensor signals. In particular, it would be advantageous to provide a control system with a certain level of fault tolerance to a situation where a blade load sensor becomes unavailable.
Accordingly, in a first aspect, there is provided a rotor control system for actuating pitch of pitch-adjustable rotor blades of a three-bladed wind turbine, the rotor control system comprises a pitch actuating unit for determining pitch modification signals to be applied to a pitch actuator for actuating the pitch of the pitch adjustable rotor blades in the event one of the blade load signals is unavailable;
In an embodiment, the pitch actuation unit may conduct the mentioned steps sequentially, and potentially with further steps being performed in between the mentioned steps.
The present invention provides a rotor control system which uses pitch modification signals for actuating pitch of pitch-adjustable rotor blades, with the aim to obtain a reduction in blade loads in a situation where one blade load sensor signal is unavailable. Embodiments of the present invention are able to keep the turbine in normal operation with the ability to actively provide load reduction via pitching, even in a situation where a blade load signal is lost, so that only two blade load signals are available.
This is obtained by providing input signals to the controller performing the control action, where the input signals are based on the load signals of the available load sensors. This is obtained by constructing combined load signals based on the available blade load signals and using the combined signals in the control action.
The combined load signals are constructed by applying a high pass filter to the blade load signals and transforming the two available blade load signals using a first coordinate transformation to an intermediate coordinate frame, where each of the associated components of the load signal in the intermediate coordinate frame are orthogonal to each other, and wherein, in the transform, the unavailable blade load signal is replaced with an estimated signal. Thus, the blade load signal values, which are initially obtained in a rotating coordinate frame where each axis is spaced 120 degrees apart, are transformed into signal values of the intermediate coordinate frame where the axes are normal to each other.
By application of the high pass filter, in combination with using an estimated signal as the unavailable signal, an accurate representation of all three load signals can be obtained in the intermediate coordinate frame. In the intermediate frame, flap moments correspond approximately to a measure of the thrust, and edge moments correspond approximately to a measure of the torque. In either case, variations in these signals will normally occur at a low frequency. Thereby, by application of a high pass filter, the contribution from the unavailable sensor is filtered out, and the unavailable signal can be estimated with a high degree of accuracy.
In an embodiment, the estimated signal is a superposition of the two available blade load signals. This may be obtained by constructing the estimated signal as a linear combination of the two available signals offset by a constant.
For the three-bladed turbine, three pairs of available blade load measurements are possible: the AB blade load pairing, the AC blade load pairing and the BC blade load pairing, with the three blades named A, B and C respectively. In the event of a sensor signal being unavailable, only one pairing is valid, with the specific pairing depending on the unavailable sensor signal; as an example, if the sensor for blade C is unavailable, the only valid pairing will be the AB blade pair. The first intermediate component is set as the first component of the transformed blade load signals resulting from the first coordinate transformation, and the second intermediate component is set as the second component of the transformed blade load signals resulting from the first coordinate transformation. These intermediate components form a vector which is then rotated to align with the reference frame along the first and the second reference direction, and applied as inputs to a control element for performing a control action operating in the fixed frame.
As inputs to the rotor control system, the blade load signals for each of the pitch adjustable rotor blades and an availability signal for each of the blade load signals are received. In this regard, if a blade load signal becomes unavailable, a blade load signal from the unavailable sensor is not as such received; rather, a null signal is received or a corrupt signal is received. If a signal is not available, any signal content still received from the corresponding load sensor is disregarded by the rotor control system.
Based on the inputs, combined load signals are constructed. The combined load signals being represented in a reference frame along a first and a second reference direction, thereby providing a first signal component and a second signal component. The reference frame being the frame in which the control action is applied. In embodiments the reference frame is a fixed frame along a yaw moment direction and a tilt moment direction. The reference frame may also be a fixed frame along a whirling direction of the rotor. The control action is applied in the reference frame providing a first resulting signal component and a second resulting signal component. The controlled signal may be transformed back into the rotating frame for application as pitch modification signals to the pitch actuator. This may be obtained by applying an m-blade coordinate transformation to the first resulting signal components. The m-blade coordinate transformation may be an inverse Coleman transformation.
An important feature of the present invention relates to coordinate transformation. In general, a coordinate transformation takes a signal expressed in a first coordinate frame and into a second coordinate frame. A coordinate frame may also be referred to as a reference frame. Such coordinate transformation may be an m-blade transformation, which is also referred to in the art as a multi-blade transformation. Examples of coordinate transformations include the Clarke transformation and the Coleman transformation. However, other transformations may also fall into the category of coordinate transformations, hereunder so-called D-Q transformation and Park transformation or similar transformations. It is within the abilities of the skilled person to determine an alternative transformation which may not strictly be a specific transformation, but which operates in an equivalent manner.
As used herein, a coordinate transformation is applied both as is (i.e. without a prefix) and in an inverse form. In this regard, signals may be measured, modified and actuated in same or different coordinate frames. In particular, a coordinate transformation may take a signal measured in a rotating reference, or coordinate, frame, i.e. signals obtained on rotating blades, and transforms the signal into a fixed reference frame of two components. The inverse m-blade transformation takes the two signal components and transforms them back to the rotating frame to provide signal components (the pitch modification signals) which can be imposed onto the three pitch actuators.
In a further aspect, the invention relates to a wind turbine comprising the rotor control system according the first aspect. In yet further aspects, the invention relates to a method of actuating pitch of pitch adjustable rotor blades of a wind turbine and to a computer program product. The computer program product may be provided on a computer readable storage medium or being downloadable from a communication network. The computer program product comprises instructions to cause a data processing system, e.g. in the form of a controller, to carry out the instruction when loaded onto a data processing system.
In general, the rotor control system may be implemented on a unit or collection of functional units which comprises one or more processors, input/output interface(s) and a memory capable of storing instructions can be executed by a processor.
In general, the various aspects of the invention may be combined and coupled in any way possible within the scope of the invention. These and other aspects, features and/or advantages of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
Embodiments of the invention will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings, in which
In the embodiments of the present invention, blade load signals for each of the pitch adjustable rotor blades are used. Such blade load signals may be measured at the blade root 9 by means of blade load sensors placed at each blade root in a manner so that the sensor detects loading in the blade. Depending on the placement and the type of sensor, loading may be detected in the flap direction 10 (in/out of plane) or in the edgewise direction 8 (in-plane). Such sensor may in embodiments be a strain gauge sensor or an optical Bragg-sensor. As the sensors are placed on the rotating blade, such load signals for each of the adjustable rotor blades are measured in the rotating reference frame of the rotor.
The PAU control unit determines pitch modification signals (Δθ1, Δθ2, Δθ3) for each rotor blade which are superimposed onto the collective pitch reference to provide resulting pitch modification signals (θA, θB, θC) that can be applied to the pitch actuators of the rotor blades individually.
In the embodiment shown in
Thus, pitch actuation signals are determined for each pitch adjustable rotor blade based on the pitch modification signal for each rotor blade.
The three blade load signals (L1, L2, L3) are obtained as sensor input signals, and may be blade load signal along a flapwise direction or a blade load signal along an edgewise direction. The three blade load signals (L1, L2, L3) are obtained in the rotating reference frame and used as inputs. These blade load signals are transformed into a references frame by application of a first coordinate transformation T1, and the desired control actions (CA) on the signals are applied in the reference frame. To bring the modified signals back into the rotating frame to be used as pitch actuation signals, a second transformation, T2, is applied, typically in the form of an inverse Coleman transformation. In this manner the rotor loads are influenced in a manner so that the measured rotor loads are reduced.
In embodiments according to the present invention a rotor control system is provided which is capable of operating according to the above defined general scheme in a situation where one of the blade load signals are unavailable, typically due to a malfunctioning blade load sensor.
In addition to the three blade load signals for each of the blades (L1, L2, L3), availability signals (v1, v2, v3) are also received or determined. In the event one of the blade load signals is unavailable, the pitch actuation unit is implemented to construct combined load signals based on the available blade load signals. The combined load signals are signals determined to provide a first signal component (A) and a second signal component (B), on which a control action can be performed in order to reduce the measured blade loads.
The control action may be applied to the first and second signal components to provide a first resulting signal component (A′) and a second resulting signal component (B′). An m-blade coordinate transformation (T2), e.g. in the form of an inverse Coleman transformation, may be applied to the first resulting signal component and the second resulting signal component to obtain the pitch modification signals (Δθ1, Δθ2, Δθ3). These pitch modification signals are then applied to the pitch actuator.
The combined load signals are determined in a manner so that the rotor control system can function with only two available blade load signals. The combined load signals are obtained in a first transformation, T1, which advantageously is split in a number of steps.
Important steps include the application of a high pass filter to the blade load signals, in combination with replacing the unavailable blade load signal with an estimated signal and transforming the remaining available and valid blade load signals using a first coordinate transformation (T1) to an intermediate coordinate frame, where each of the associated components of the load signal in the intermediate coordinate frame are orthogonal to each other.
By application of the high pass filter, in combination with using an estimated signal as the unavailable signal, an accurate representation of all three load signals can be obtained in the intermediate coordinate frame.
Transforming coordinates values from a rotating coordinate system where the axes are spaced 120 degrees (due to the blades position) to a coordinate system where each of the coordinate values are orthogonal to each other can be done using e.g. the Clarke transformation, which is known from electrical engineering:
where (L1, L2, L3) are the three blade load signals, and (vα, vμ, vγ) are the components of the associated components of the load signal in the intermediate coordinate frame.
As an example, the Clarke transformation is applied to the situation where the L3 signal is unavailable and being replaced an estimated signal being a super position in the form of a linear transformation of the available signals, e.g. set as −(L1+L2)+κ:
The vγ component is omitted as it will be virtually zero due to the high-pass filtering, which will also remove the x-factor in the resulting vector components.
In the transform, the unavailable blade load signal is replaced with the estimated signal. This gives rise to three situations depending on which blade load signal that is unavailable, and three sets of intermediate components can be determined. In an embodiment the unavailable signal (LUA) is replaced by: LUA=−(LA1+LA2)+κ, where the subscript A1 and A2 refers to the first available signal and second available signal, respectively. After the high-pass filter, the constant κ is removed, and the three sets of intermediate components can be determined as follows:
The transformation is done using the appropriate representation of the load signals, and a first intermediate component, vα, is set as the first component of the transformed blade load signals resulting from the first coordinate transformation, and the second intermediate component, vμ, is set as the second component of the transformed blade load signals.
It is noted that with pairings of blade load sensors, two orthogonal components can be calculated via different, but equivalent, linear combinations.
To obtain the first signal component (A) and the second signal component (B), the first intermediate component and the second intermediate component are rotated to align with the reference frame along the first and the second reference direction. In an embodiment, the rotor azimuth angle Φ is used to align the first signal component and the second signal component with the nacelle fixed reference system, often referred to as the D-Q-frame or the tilt-yaw frame. In this embodiment, the αβ-vector by the rotation matrix:
In a general situation where a general estimated signal is applied, the first signal component (A) and the second signal component (B) are obtained as explained above, by the coordinate transformation to the intermediate coordinate frame, e.g. using the Clark transformation, followed by the rotation of the intermediate components to align with the reference frame in which the control action is applied, as explained above.
In a specific situation where the estimated signal is set as the negative sum of the two available blade load signals, the coordinate transformation to the intermediate coordinate frame followed by the rotation of the intermediate components to align with the reference frame in which the control action is applied becomes equivalent, or at least approximatively equivalent, to applying a Coleman transformation on the relevant sets of intermediate components. In this situation the implementation of the calculation can be simplified by constructing the combined load signals by:
In an embodiment, in addition to applying the high pass filter to the blade load signals, a notch filter is applied at a 3P blade passing frequency. In particular, in a situation where the blade load signals are blade load signals in the flapwise direction, it may be beneficial to notch out the 3P blade passing frequency. In general, a notch filter may be applied at a frequency where a load is synchronized for all three blades where the load disturbance appears collective on the blades. In addition to the 3P blade passing frequency for flap loads, also 6P, 9P, etc. may be notched out.
In an embodiment, the high pass filter is set at a cut off below a 1P blade passing frequency, such as one decade below the 1P blade passing frequency, to ensure sufficient separation between the cut off and the 1P frequency. In another embodiment, the high pass filter is set at a cut off below a frequency of changes in the mean wind speed. Again, the cut off may be set one decade below the 1P blade passing frequency. The changes in the mean wind speed may be determined based on a predetermined determination made prior to installing the turbine and thereby based on historic data of a fixed period of time. The changes in the mean wind speed may also be determined based on a recurring determination of mean wind speed.
In an advantageous embodiment, the control action (CA) applied is the same irrespectively of whether or not all three blade load signals are available, or only two blade load signals are available. An important advantage of embodiments of the present invention is that it can be implemented in a manner so that the first signal component and the second signal component are independent on the control action. In a situation where one blade load signal becomes unavailable, the rotor control system can be implemented to enable the first coordinate transformation (T1) in accordance with the embodiments of the present invention, and in a situation where all blade load sensors are available to use a different manner of obtaining the first signal component and the second signal component. For example, if all three available blade load signals are available, a normal Coleman transformation may be used.
In the event two or three blade load signals becomes unavailable, the turbine may be operated in a safe mode, e.g. in a derated mode or shutdown.
The differences in the two signals are better seen in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PA202170245 | May 2021 | DK | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DK2022/050100 | 5/16/2022 | WO |