Reference is made to French Application Serial No. 12/02.601, filed on Oct. 1, 2012 and PCT/FR2013,052040, filed on Sep. 4, 2013, which applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to renewable energy and more particularly to control of wind turbines.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A wind turbine allows the kinetic energy from the wind to be converted into electrical or mechanical energy. For conversion of the wind energy to electrical energy, the wind turbine is made up of the following elements:
Since the beginning of the 1990s, there has been renewed interest in wind power, in particular in the European Union where the annual growth rate is about 20%. This growth is attributed to the benefit of carbon-emission-free electricity generation. In order to sustain this growth, the energy yield of wind turbines still has to be improved. The prospect of wind power production increase requires developing effective production tools and advanced control tools in order to improve the performance of the machines. Wind turbines are designed to produce electricity at the lowest possible cost. They are therefore generally built to reach their maximum performance at a wind speed of approximately 15 m/s. It is in fact unnecessary to design wind turbines that maximize their yield at higher wind speeds, which are not common. In the case of wind speeds above 15 m/s, it is necessary to not capture part of the additional energy contained in the wind to avoid damage to the wind turbine. All wind turbines are therefore designed with a power regulation system.
For this power regulation, controllers have been designed for variable-speed wind turbines. The purpose of the controllers is to maximize the electrical power which is recovered, to minimize the rotor speed fluctuations and to minimize the fatigue and the extreme moments of the structure (blades, tower and platform).
Linear controllers have been widely used for power control which control the blade pitch angle (orientation of the blades). These include techniques using PI (proportional integral) and PID (proportional integral derivative) controllers, LQ (linear quadratic) control techniques and strategies based on robust linear controls.
However, the performance of these linear controllers is limited by the highly non-linear characteristics of the wind turbine. First strategies based on non-linear controls have been developed, such a strategy is for example described in the document: Boukhezzar B., Lupu L., Siguerdidjane H., Hand M. “Multivariable Control Strategy for Variable Speed, Variable Pitch Wind Turbines” Renewable Energy, 32 (2007) 1273-1287.
None of these strategies however uses the incident wind speed, which is a fundamental element for the aerodynamic phenomena that govern the wind turbine. To take this component into account, initial work was performed with a measurement of the wind speed. This work shows that the productivity of a wind turbine and the life thereof can be significantly increased through innovative strategies using the wind speed.
This technique unfortunately requires a sensor that is expensive and not very accurate. To take the incident wind speed into account without a sensor, an estimation of this speed can be performed to use this data in the control. Further work has been conducted to this end using a Kalman filter, which is described in the document: Boukhezzar B., Siguerdidjane H., “Nonlinear Control of Variable Speed Wind Turbine Without Wind Speed Measurement” IEEE Control and Decision Conference (2005). This method is not sufficiently accurate because the wind reconstruction is poorly representative. Indeed, according to this method, the wind is not structured, it is considered as white noise, which is not the case experimentally.
The invention relates to a method for controlling a wind turbine in order to optimize the energy produced with control accounting for an estimation of the incident wind speed. Estimation of the wind speed is achieved by accounting for the dynamics of the system, from the measurement of the rotor speed, the torque imposed on the generator and of the orientation of the turbine blades for an accurate estimation.
The invention relates to a method for controlling a wind turbine including a rotor to which at least one blade is attached, and an electric machine connected to the rotor, wherein a pitch angle θ of the at least one blade and an electrical recovery torque Te of the electric machine are known. The method comprises carrying out the following stages:
According to the invention, the rotor dynamics model is expressed by the relationship:
with Jr being the inertia of the rotor, Taero being the aerodynamic torque applied to the rotor that depends on the incident wind speed Vw , the rotating speed of the rotor Ωr and the pitch angle θ, Tl (Ωr) being friction and load torque on the rotor that depends on the rotating speed of the rotor Ωr, and N being the transmission ratio between the rotor and the electric machine.
Advantageously, the aerodynamic torque applied to the rotor is expressed by a formula:
with Rb being the radius of the rotor, ρ being the air density, cq being a parameter determined by mapping the rotor as a function of the pitch angle θ and of ratio
According to an embodiment of the invention, when the incident wind speed Vw is considered as a harmonic perturbation, the incident wind speed Vw can be written with a formula:
with p being the number of harmonics considered, ωk being the frequency of harmonic k, ck being the coefficient of harmonic k, and the incident wind speed Vw is determined by determining parameters ωk and ck by use of the rotor dynamics model, then the incident wind speed is deduced therefrom.
Preferably, the frequency of a harmonic k is determined using a formula of the type:
Advantageously, coefficients ck are determined by solving a system of equations of the form:
with LΩ being a gain that controls the convergence rate of the estimation of the rotor rotating speed, Lk being a gain that controls the convergence rate of the harmonic decomposition, and Ω representing the measured rotor speed.
Preferably, the gain LΩ is substantially 1 and the gain Lk is determined with a formula:
Furthermore, the pitch angle θ can be controlled by use of the following stages:
Preferably, at least one of the setpoint values is modified by carrying out the following stages:
According to an embodiment of the invention, the resulting torque setpoint Tressp is written as follows: Tressp=
where N is a gear ratio between the rotor and the electric machine.
Furthermore, the pitch angle of the blade can be determined by inverting an aerodynamic torque model and using the incident wind speed Vw and measured rotor speed Ωr.
Advantageously, the proportional term is determined using a transmission dynamics model.
Other features and advantages of the method according to the invention will be clear from reading the description hereafter of embodiments given by way of non limitative example, with reference to the accompanying figures wherein:
and
The invention relates to a method for controlling an onshore or offshore horizontal-axis wind turbine, wherein the pitch angle of the blades and/or the electrical recovery torque of the electric machine are controlled to optimize energy recovery.
In the description hereafter, the following notations are used:
These notations, when followed by superscript -sp, represent the setpoints associated with the quantities considered.
Stage 1)—Measurement of the Rotor Rotating Speed
Rotor rotating speed Ωr is measured during operation of the wind turbine, notably by a rotation sensor.
Stage 2)—Construction of a Rotor Dynamics Model (MOD DYN)
The actual pitch angle θ of the blades is first determined, as well as electrical recovery torque Te , by measuring (with a sensor for example) or as a function of the control applied to the actuators to modify these parameters.
A rotor dynamics model is then constructed. A rotor dynamics model is understood to be a model representing the dynamic phenomena applied to the rotor. This model is obtained by applying the fundamental principle of dynamics to the rotor. The model allows relating the incident wind speed Vw to a rotating speed of the rotor Ωr, to pitch angle θ of the blade and to electrical recovery torque Te of the electric machine.
This rotor dynamics model is then applied with known data: θ and Te, and at the measured value Ωr, which thus allows to determine incident wind speed Vw.
Aerodynamic Torque Model (MOD AERO)
According to this embodiment of the invention, aerodynamic torque Taero is modelled by a model describing the wind power contained in a cylinder, multiplied by a factor describing the fact that a wind turbine only allows recovery of part of this power. Aerodynamic torque Taero is thus modelled as a function of incident wind speed Vw pitch angle θ and rotor speed Ωr. Such a model can be expressed under steady state conditions as
The parameter cq can be determined by mapping the rotor. An example of mapping parameter cq is shown in
for various pitch angles (a curve for each θ). This type of map is well known. Ratio
is denoted by TSR in
Aerodynamic torque Taero can therefore be written as a function of quantities related to the wind turbine (ρ,Rb), of the known value (θ) and of the incident wind speed to be estimated (Vw).
Fundamental Dynamics Principle (PFD)
By writing the fundamental dynamics principle applied to the rotor concerning the moments on the axis of rotation thereof, a relation is obtained of the type:
In this relation, the aerodynamic torque Taero determined with the aerodynamic torque model described above is used. Furthermore, the friction and load torque on the rotor Tl can be conventionally determined by a second-order polynomial of rotating speed Ωr of the rotor.
By combining the two models, a relation between incident wind speed Vw and the known or measured quantities such as pitch angle θ of the blades, electrical recovery torque Te and rotating speed Ωr of the rotor can be established.
Incident Wind Modelling (MOD VENT)
The last modelling stage considers the wind as a harmonic perturbation. This means an assumption that the wind can be is written in the form:
with p being the number of harmonics considered for the harmonic decomposition of the wind, p=50 can be selected for example.
Moreover, for the frequency of the harmonics,
in Hz (with k>0) can be chosen.
By combining the three models presented above, a dynamic model of the form as follows can be obtained:
From this system of equations, an observer can be constructed allowing determination of coefficients ck of the harmonic decomposition of the incident wind. The observer can be written in the form:
where Ω represents the measured rotor speed, LΩ is necessarily a positive gain controlling the convergence rate of the rotor speed estimation. The gain can be selected equal to 1 for example, and {Lk}k∈[−p,p] is a gain controlling the convergence rate of the harmonic decomposition. These gains must be positive, and can be selected equal to
for example.
The latter system of equations represents an adaptive type non-linear estimator allowing estimation of coefficients ck of the harmonic decomposition of the incident wind signal Vw.
This method reconstructs the excitation of wind Vw through coefficients ck . Reconstructed wind Vw is given by the relation as follows:
Stage 3)—Wind Turbine Control (COM)
Depending on incident wind speed Vw, the wind turbine is controlled so as to optimize the energy recovered. According to the invention, pitch angle θ of the blades and/or electrical recovery torque Te can be controlled as a function of incident wind Vw.
According to an embodiment of the invention, pitch angle θ of the blades and/or electrical recovery torque Te are determined by mapping the wind turbine as a function of incident wind Vw.
Alternatively, according to an embodiment of the invention illustrated in
1—Determining the Pitch Allowing the Recovered Power to be Optimized
One goal of the method according to the invention is to maximize the energy production of an onshore or offshore horizontal-axis wind turbine (blade perpendicular to the wind) while limiting extreme moments and fatigue of the mechanical structure.
To maximize the energy production of a wind turbine, the pitch angle θ of the blades allowing maximizing the recovered power Paero as a function of incident wind speed Vw determined in the rotor dynamics model construction stage is sought.
According to an embodiment, a model of the recoverable power is used to define this angle. This power Paero can be written as follows:
P
aero
=T
aero*Ωr
Angle θ allowing Paero to be maximized is thus sought. The following stages are therefore carried out:
i—Generating an Electric Machine Torque Setpoint Tesp
An electric machine torque setpoint Tesp is first determined. This setpoint value is obtained through mapping as a function of the speed of the electric machine.
According to the invention, aerodynamic torque Taero is modelled by the aerodynamic model as described in the dynamic model construction part.
Thus, to determine the torque setpoint for the electric machine as a function of the speed of the electric machine, the aerodynamic power recovered for each wind speed is optimized.
This allows having torque setpoint Te that depends on the rotating speed of the electric machine shaft: Tesp=f(Ωe).
However, in relation to this reference curve, two limitations are applied:
Thus, there are three regions in the curve Tesp=f(Ωe):
ii—Generating an Aerodynamic Torque Setpoint Taerosp
The purpose is to generate an aerodynamic torque setpoint Taerosp allowing achieving the rotor rotating speed setpoint Ωrsp. The rotor dynamics model is therefore used.
Thus, the control strategy used is a dynamic control strategy that anticipates the setpoint variation and corrects with two terms which are a proportional term and an integral term. The strategy is written with a relation of the form:
where kp and ki are two real parameters to be calibrated so as to guarantee convergence of the speed to the setpoint thereof.
iii—Determining a pitch position θ
From this aerodynamic torque setpoint Taerosp, a pitch angle θ is determined for the blades to satisfy this aerodynamic torque request Taerosp. The aerodynamic torque model is therefore used with the incident wind speed Vw determined in the rotor dynamics model construction stage, the measured rotor speed Ωrsp and the torque setpoint Taerosp. By inverting the model (using a Newton algorithm for example), a pitch setpoint
Thus, with this control law, the convergence to the reference rotor speed allowing the recovered power to be maximized is guaranteed.
2—Determining the Torque Resulting from the Torque Setpoints Tesp and Taerosp
From setpoints Tesp and Taerosp, torque
where Jr and Jg are the inertias of the rotor and of the electric machine respectively.
3—Generating a Resulting Torque Setpoint (Tressp) that Decreases the Fatigue and the Moments of the Transmission
It is desired to modify this resulting torque
where:
Thus, the control strategy is designed to generate a resulting torque different from
T
res
sp
=T
res
−k{dot over (γ)}
tr
with k being strictly positive calibration parameters. These parameters can be determined experimentally. All the parameters k can be considered equal to 1 for example.
4—Distributing the Resulting Torque Setpoint (Tressp) Between the Aerodynamic and Electrical Torques
This resulting torque setpoint Tressp is then distributed between aerodynamic torque Taero and torque Te of the electric machine. Distribution is achieved according to the operating zones. In a zone 2, where the aerodynamic torque is limiting, a torque reserve exists. In this case, the torque modification influences the torque of the electric machine and not the aerodynamic torque.
Thus, in this case, the relationship:
Similarly, in a zone 3 where the torque of the electric machine is limiting, the torque modification influences the aerodynamic torque. Therefore, the relationship is obtained:
5—Determining a Pitch Position Allowing this Aerodynamic Torque to be Achieved
From this aerodynamic torque setpoint Taerostrat, a pitch angle θ for the blades to satisfy this aerodynamic torque request Taerostrat. Therefore, the aerodynamic torque model with the incident wind speed Vw determined in the rotor dynamics model construction stage, the measured rotor speed Ωrsp and the torque setpoint Taerostrat is used. By inverting the model (using a Newton algorithm for example), a pitch setpoint
Thus, with this control law, the convergence to the reference rotor speed allowing the recovered power to be maximized, while minimizing the mechanical impact (fatigue and extreme moment) on the transmission is guaranteed.
6—Orienting the Blades at the Determined Pitch Angle
To optimize the electric power recovered by the wind turbine, the blades are oriented at the pitch angle calculated in the previous stage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1202601 | Oct 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2013/052040 | 9/4/2013 | WO | 00 |